Ho Chi Minh Times

Wednesday, Feb 11, 2026

0:00
0:00

We will protect them from the digital Wild West.’ Another country will ban social media for under-16s

Spain’s proposed crackdown on youth access and platform liability crystallizes a deeper struggle over who governs digital space—states or tech executives
The core issue is no longer whether social media harms children; it is whether democratic governments are prepared to criminalize the mechanics of algorithmic amplification and directly limit platform access to minors.

Spain’s plan to ban social media for under-16s and hold executives criminally liable for failing to remove illegal content marks a decisive shift from consumer protection rhetoric to enforcement power.

This is not a symbolic warning.

It is a test of whether states can reassert sovereignty over digital systems that operate across borders, monetize attention, and shape political culture.

Spain’s proposal would require strict age verification tools, introduce criminal penalties for algorithmic amplification of illegal content, and sanction individuals and platforms that help spread hate.

The initiative aligns with moves in Australia, France and Denmark to restrict youth access, but it goes further by targeting executive accountability and algorithmic design.

The legislation process is set to begin immediately, signaling urgency rather than incremental reform.

Confirmed vs unclear: What we can confirm is that multiple governments are converging around age-based bans and stronger liability standards.

What remains unclear is how strict age verification will function in practice without expanding biometric surveillance, how “algorithmic manipulation” will be legally defined, and whether cross-border enforcement will survive inevitable legal challenges from global platforms.

The gap between legislative ambition and technical feasibility is the decisive fault line.

Mechanism: Social platforms rely on engagement-maximizing algorithms that prioritize emotionally charged content.

Higher engagement yields more advertising revenue.

Children are disproportionately susceptible to feedback loops that reward outrage, validation-seeking and compulsive use.

Age bans attempt to sever access at the entry point.

Criminal liability attempts to rewire incentives at the executive level.

Both measures aim to change behavior by altering the cost structure of digital harm.

Incentives and constraints: Politically, governments face rising parental anger, measurable increases in youth mental health distress, and electoral incentives to act decisively.

Economically, platforms depend on network effects and youth adoption to sustain long-term user bases.

Technologically, reliable age verification without data overcollection is difficult.

Legally, European digital rights frameworks impose privacy and free expression constraints.

Each side is constrained: states by rights law and enforcement capacity; platforms by public trust erosion and regulatory risk.

Stakeholder leverage: Governments control market access, fines, and criminal statutes.

Platforms control the infrastructure of public discourse and can threaten service withdrawal or legal escalation.

Parents and schools exert moral pressure but lack regulatory authority.

Smaller member states gain leverage through coordination, amplifying bargaining power against multinational firms whose revenues often exceed national GDPs.

Cross-border cooperation is the leverage multiplier.

Competitive dynamics: If one major EU country successfully implements an enforceable under-16 ban, pressure will cascade across the bloc.

Firms will resist fragmentation of services by geography because compliance complexity scales costs.

States that hesitate risk appearing permissive toward digital harms.

The race is not ideological; it is regulatory.

Whoever sets the workable model will shape the next decade of digital governance.

Scenarios: In the base case, Spain passes legislation with phased enforcement and negotiates compliance standards with major platforms.

Some litigation follows, but partial age verification systems are deployed and fines become credible deterrents.

In the bull case, coordinated European enforcement creates a de facto continental standard, forcing global platforms to redesign youth access and moderation systems worldwide.

In the bear case, technical loopholes undermine age checks, courts narrow liability definitions, and political momentum dissipates after initial headlines.

What to watch:
- Precise legal definition of “algorithmic amplification.”
- Technical standards chosen for age verification.

- Whether biometric data becomes mandatory.

- First executive-level prosecution or credible threat thereof.

- Cross-border enforcement agreements within the EU.
- Platform decisions to geofence or withdraw services.

- Court rulings on proportionality and free speech.

- Advertising revenue shifts tied to youth restrictions.

- Uptake of alternative youth-specific digital spaces.

- Evidence of measurable reduction in youth exposure to harmful content.

The broader question is whether democracies can impose durable rules on systems optimized for engagement rather than safety.

Age bans and criminal liability represent a power shift from voluntary moderation to statutory enforcement.

If implemented coherently, they will redefine platform governance.

If executed poorly, they risk driving harms into less visible corners of the internet while normalizing intrusive surveillance.

The battle is not about teenagers alone.

It is about who governs algorithmic influence in the digital era.
Newsletter

Related Articles

Ho Chi Minh Times
0:00
0:00
Close
South Korea’s Births Edge Up After Years of Decline, Raising Hopes — and Doubts
Japan’s Sanae Takaichi Secures Historic Supermajority After High-Stakes Snap Election
We will protect them from the digital Wild West.’ Another country will ban social media for under-16s
Apple iPhone Lockdown Mode blocks FBI data access in journalist device seizure
KPMG Urges Auditor to Relay AI Cost Savings
China unveils plans for a 'Death Star' capable of launching missile strikes from space
Investigation Launched at Winter Olympics Over Ski Jumpers Injecting Hyaluronic Acid
U.S. State Department Issues Urgent Travel Warning for Citizens to Leave Iran Immediately
Wall Street Erases All Gains of 2026; Bitcoin Plummets 14% to $63,000
Eighty-one-year-old man in the United States fatally shoots Uber driver after scam threat
AI Invented “Hot Springs” — Tourists Arrived and Were Shocked
Tech Market Shifts and AI Investment Surge Drive Global Innovation and Layoffs
Global Shifts in War, Trade, Energy and Security Mark Major International Developments
Markets Jolt as AI Spending, US Policy Shifts, and Global Security Moves Drive New Volatility
Former South Korean First Lady Kim Keon Hee Sentenced to 20 Months for Bribery
Tesla Ends Model S and X Production and Sends $2 Billion to xAI as 2025 Revenue Declines
China Executes 11 Members of the Ming Clan in Cross-Border Scam Case Linked to Myanmar’s Lawkai
Starmer Signals UK Push for a More ‘Sophisticated’ Relationship With China in Talks With Xi
The AI Hiring Doom Loop — Algorithmic Recruiting Filters Out Top Talent and Rewards Average or Fake Candidates
Putin’s Four-Year Ukraine Invasion Cost: Russia’s Mass Casualty Attrition and the Donbas Security-Guarantee Tradeoff
Japan Bids Farewell to Its Last Pandas Amid Rising Tensions with China
Thailand and Nepal Launch Virus Screening After Nipah Outbreak Confirmed in India
Four Arrested in Andhra Pradesh Over Alleged HIV-Contaminated Injection Attack on Doctor
WhatsApp Develops New Meta AI Features to Enhance User Control
Air France and KLM Suspend Multiple Middle East Routes as Regional Tensions Disrupt Aviation
PLA opens CMC probe of Zhang Youxia, Liu Zhenli over Xi authority and discipline violations
Gold Jumps More Than 8% in a Week as the Dollar Slides Amid Greenland Tariff Dispute
Boston Dynamics Atlas humanoid robot and LG CLOiD home robot: the platform lock-in fight to control Physical AI
United States under President Donald Trump completes withdrawal from the World Health Organization: health sovereignty versus global outbreak early-warning access
Tech Brief: AI Compute, Chips, and Platform Power Moves Driving Today’s Market Narrative
NATO’s Stress Test Under Trump: Alliance Credibility, Burden-Sharing, and the Fight Over Strategic Territory
Thailand and ASEAN Today: Border Enforcement, Investor Signals, and Bangkok’s PM2.5 Reality
Greenland, Gaza, and Global Leverage: Today’s 10 Power Stories Shaping Markets and Security
Asia’s 10 Biggest Moves Today: Energy Finds, Trade Deals, Power Shifts, and a Tourism Reality Check
TikTok’s U.S. Escape Plan: National Security Firewall or Political Theater With a Price Tag?
No Sign of an AI Bubble as Tech Giants Double Down at World’s Largest Technology Show
Cybercrime, Inc.: When Crime Becomes an Economy. How the World Accidentally Built a Twenty-Trillion-Dollar Criminal Economy
There is no sovereign immunity for poisoning millions with drugs.
The U.S. State Department’s account in Persian: “President Trump is a man of action. If you didn’t know it until now, now you do—do not play games with President Trump.”
Korean Beauty Turns Viral Skincare Into a Global Export Engine
President Trump Says United States Will Administer Venezuela Until a Secure Leadership Transition
Delta Force Identified as Unit Behind U.S. Operation That Captured Venezuela’s President
Tesla Loses EV Crown to China’s BYD After Annual Deliveries Decline in 2025
Diamonds Are Powering a New Quantum Revolution
Caviar and Foie Gras? China Is Becoming a Luxury Food Powerhouse
Scambodia: The World Owes Thailand’s Military a Profound Debt of Gratitude
War on the Thailand–Cambodia Front
Thailand Condemns Cambodian Rocket Attack on Civilian Village
Hackers Are Hiding Malware in Open-Source Tools and IDE Extensions
Traveling to USA? Homeland Security moving toward requiring foreign travelers to share social media history
×