Gate News message, April 15 — French President Emmanuel Macron is convening a video summit on April 16 with leaders from Spain, the Netherlands, Ireland, and EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to coordinate common standards for restricting minors’ access to social media, Bloomberg reported on April 14. The initiative aims to harmonize differing national regulations on age limits and identity verification methods across the bloc.
At least seven EU member states are currently advancing legislation on the issue, driven by concerns over youth mental health, cyberbullying, and harmful content exposure. France is pursuing a ban on social media use for children under 15, with legislation targeted for completion by September. The French Senate recently discussed restricting access to the most harmful platforms while allowing some services under parental supervision; the draft law is now under EU Commission review.
The EU has already ramped up pressure on platforms’ addictive design features through digital regulations, targeting auto-play videos and repetitive push notifications. Macron has been consulting industry experts including LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman and Signal CEO Meredith Whittaker on technical enforcement approaches. The EU Commission has historically been cautious about harmonizing age thresholds but may face pressure to act as member states accelerate individual legislative efforts.