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Norway Plans Social Media Ban for Under-16s, Puts Age Checks on Tech Firms

Technology companies would have to verify users’ ages, and the government says 8,000 public consultation responses helped shape the stricter proposal.

  • On Friday, Norway's government announced plans to propose a national ban on social media for children under 16 by the end of 2026, requiring technology companies to manage age verification.
  • This move follows Australia's world-first ban enacted in December, which resulted in more than 4.7 million under-16 accounts being deactivated or removed since restrictions began.
  • "We are introducing this legislation because we want a childhood where children get to be children," Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Stoere said, emphasizing that daily life must not be dominated by algorithms and screens.
  • At least 14 European countries are currently considering age-based restrictions on social media access, with Denmark, Italy, Portugal, and Spain actively exploring formal legislation or consultations.
  • MPs recently voted 260 to 161 to reject an amendment to the Schools Bill that would have raised the age for social media access to 16, showing divergent approaches globally.
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Lean Left

The country is introducing an age limit for social media. When will the law take effect? The Norwegian government has announced plans to introduce an age limit for social media users. The bill will be submitted to parliament by the end of 2026, according to RBC-Ukraine, citing the official website of the Norwegian government. Read also: When will Norwegian F-16s appear in Ukrainian skies: what the Prime Minister says How the restriction will wor…

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Lean Left

Norway said it would submit a bill to parliament by the end of the year to ban children from using social media until the age of 16, making technology companies responsible for age verification. Several European countries are seeking to curb children's use of social media, after Australia took the lead with a world-first ban on those under 16 last December. "We are introducing this legislation because we want a childhood where children can be ch…

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Left

Government proposal must be submitted by the end of the year, and the intention is that the law will come into force in 2027. Several countries have submitted similar projects in recent months, following Australia's pioneering example.

·São Paulo, Brazil
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CNN Brasil broke the news in Brazil on Friday, April 24, 2026.
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