The United Kingdom has taken one of the boldest digital policy decisions of the 21st century. The government has announced that children under the age of 16 will be prohibited from accessing major social media platforms such as TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, YouTube, and X. The move is being presented not as a punishment for young people, but as a deliberate attempt to “give children their childhood back.”
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This legislation did not emerge overnight. It is the culmination of years of growing concern among parents, educators, psychologists, child protection advocates, and policymakers. Increasing evidence linked excessive social media use to cyberbullying, anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, sleep deprivation, online grooming, and exposure to harmful content. Parents increasingly felt they were losing the battle against algorithms specifically designed to keep children glued to their screens.
Before arriving at this decision, the British government embarked on an extensive national consultation. More than 116,000 people participated, including parents and young people. The outcome was striking: nine out of ten parents supported a social media ban for children under 16. Armed with this public backing, the government moved from debate to policy formulation. The proposed regulations are expected to be presented to Parliament before the end of the year, with implementation targeted for 2027. The communications regulator, Ofcom, will oversee compliance and age-verification mechanisms.
The significance of this legislation extends beyond Britain. It represents a shift in thinking about technology. For years, governments treated social media as an inevitable part of modern life. The UK is now saying that childhood itself deserves protection from some of the excesses of the digital age. The legislation places the welfare of children above the commercial interests of technology companies. It also signals that governments can intervene when innovation begins to undermine social well-being.
Nigeria should pay close attention.
Our children are among the most active consumers of social media content in Africa. Many teenagers spend hours daily on TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and other platforms. Cases of cyberbullying, online scams, sextortion, pornography exposure, internet addiction, and dangerous social media challenges are becoming increasingly common. Yet there is little public conversation about protecting children online.
Unlike the UK, Nigeria lacks robust age-verification systems, comprehensive online child protection laws, and effective digital literacy programmes. Many parents are unfamiliar with the technologies their children use and often surrender smartphones to children without supervision. The result is that children are exposed to a digital environment for which they are emotionally and psychologically unprepared.
Nigeria may not be ready to impose an outright social media ban for under-16s. Enforcement would be difficult, and infrastructure challenges remain significant. However, the country can begin by strengthening digital literacy in schools, promoting parental controls, requiring stronger age verification by platforms, and enacting tougher online child protection measures.
The UK has started a global conversation about where society should draw the line between technological freedom and child protection. Whether one agrees with the ban or not, one fact is undeniable: the British government has decided that childhood is too precious to be left entirely in the hands of social media companies.
Nigeria would do well to ask itself the same question: Are we raising children, or are we allowing algorithms to do it for us?



