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Canada Proposes Social Media Ban For Kids Under 16

Canada is considering a major move that could change how young people use social media.

A new proposal aims to ban children under the age of 16 from accessing social media platforms, citing growing concerns around mental health, online addiction, cyberbullying, and harmful content exposure.

The proposal is part of a wider global debate over how platforms like Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, and X affect teenagers and children.

Supporters of the idea argue that endless scrolling, algorithm-driven content, sleep disruption, and social pressure are deeply impacting young users.

Many experts also believe social media companies are not doing enough to protect minors online.

But the proposal has also triggered criticism.

Some argue that banning access completely may not solve the problem and could instead push young users toward hidden or unregulated online spaces.

Others say digital education, parental guidance, and stronger platform safety tools may work better than blanket bans.

Countries around the world are now increasingly exploring age restrictions, digital ID systems, screen-time regulations, and stricter online safety laws for minors.

The conversation reflects a larger question Gen-Z and Gen-Alpha are already living through:

How much social media is too much?

Why This Matters

For younger generations, social media is not just entertainment.

It shapes identity, friendships, confidence, trends, politics, and mental health.

Decisions like this could influence how future generations experience the internet itself.

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