Gatchalian files bill restricting social media access for children under 16
At A Glance
- Filipino children below 16 years old may no longer be able to access social media once a measure filed by Senator Win Gatchalian passes into law.
Filipino children below 16 years old may no longer be able to access social media once a measure filed by Senator Sherwin Gatchalian passes into law.
FILE - The Instagram logo is seen on a cell phone in Boston, Oct. 14, 2022. (AP Photo/Michael Dwyer, File)
Gatchalian introduced Senate Bill No. 2066 or the Social Media Safety for Children Act, which establishes a minimum age for social media use and regulates children's access to social media platforms.
The bill also prescribes obligations for social media providers and provides penalties thereof.
In pushing for the bill, Gatchalian said it is imperative "to institute preventive safeguards and strengthen the protection of children's physical, mental, moral, and social well-being in the digital environment."
"While the country has laws which protect children from abuse and exploitation... these statutes are primarily penal and reactive in nature and do not establish a comprehensive regulatory framework governing minors' access to and exposure on social media platforms," the senator said in the explanatory note of the bill.
Under SB 2066, children below 16 shall be prohibited from registering, accessing or maintaining accounts on any social media platform; and social media companies shall implement reliable age-verification mechanisms.
Among mechanisms social media companies must enforce include ID authentication, face verification or comparable technologies, among others.
Companies must also conduct regular audits to detect and deactivate accounts held by age-restricted users, as well as establish prompt reporting and response mechanisms for underage access, the bill added.
The Department of Information and Communications Technology (DICT) shall be tasked to monitor compliance of social media platforms providers as well as third-party age verification providers.
"Upon determination that a social media account is owned, operated, or used by an age-restricted user in violation of this Act, the DICT shall issue a Disabling Order directing the immediate removal or deactivation of such account," the bill read.
"Social media platform providers shall comply with the Disabling Order within five days from receipt thereof," it added.
According to the measure, a fine ranging from P1 million to P10 million shall be imposed per violation as well as a daily fine of P100 for each day of continuing violation upon due notice.