
18 days · 7 summary articles
A government-appointed commission on Wednesday rejected calls for a blanket ban on social media for children under 16, instead proposing a three-pronged approach to digital youth protection that prioritises education and platform regulation over prohibition. The 16-member panel, convened by Family Minister Karin Prien (CDU), delivered its findings to the Bundestag on 24 June 2026, concluding that a statutory age floor of 13 years—advocated by Prien—would be more effective than an outright “16-for-kids” media ban.
The commission’s final report, published the same day, frames digital child protection as a triad of safeguarding, empowerment and participation. It explicitly opposes a universal social-media prohibition for 13- to 18-year-olds, arguing that such a measure would be both unenforceable and counterproductive. Instead, it recommends mandatory “KI-Seepferdchen” certification for platforms serving minors, obligatory parent training programmes and a nationwide ban on smartphone use during school hours. “We need to equip young people to navigate digital spaces, not wall them off,” said commission chair Prof. Dr. Ute Schmid .
Prien immediately endorsed the 13-year threshold, telling the *Handelsblatt* that Germany must “draw a clear line” to shield pre-teens from exposure to pornography, self-harm content and algorithmic radicalisation . Her proposal would require platforms to verify age via government-issued digital IDs, a move critics warn could create a surveillance infrastructure. The *taz* noted that the commission left the exact mechanism for age verification unresolved, leaving open whether a risk-based licensing system might replace a hard age cap .
Reactions split along familiar lines. The *Süddeutsche Zeitung* praised the commission’s refusal to “criminalise adolescence” but questioned whether 13 was too low given mounting evidence of harm . *Die Welt* quoted *Bild* politics editor Sebastian Geisler arguing that while social media posed grave risks, “in dubio pro libertate” should prevail until parents and schools fulfilled their duties .
The commission’s 50-plus recommendations now await legislative translation. Prien’s ministry has signalled it will introduce a draft bill in the autumn, with cross-party talks slated for September. Meanwhile, the Federal Ministry of Education is preparing nationwide teacher training on digital literacy, due to begin in the 2026/27 school year.
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