The Verge⁠51%

Social media limits are coming for teens across Europe⁠26%

By Robert Hart⁠33%

7/13/2026, 9:22:52 AM

BS Summary: This article contains 0 faulty reasoning types, including no named faulty reasoning patterns yet, with no single egregious example has been isolated yet. Analysis detected 0 faulty-reasoning hits from 531 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 37.7% and a BS Rank of ⁠26% (11,417 of 15,236 articles). This article is better (less manipulative) than 74.90% of the article peer group.

Social media limits are coming for teens across Europe

‘We need age-appropriate restrictions on platforms,’ said EU leader Ursula von der Leyen.

Jul 13, 2026, 9:22 AM UTC

Let me see some ID: age verification is spreading across the internet

Robert Hart is a London-based reporter at The Verge covering all things AI and a Senior Tarbell Fellow. Previously, he wrote about health, science and tech for Forbes .

The European Union is weighing sweeping new restrictions on children’s and teenagers’ access to social media, including age limits, an outright ban, and phased access. Social media platforms could also be forced to prove their services are not harmful before young people are allowed to use them.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc’s executive arm could propose new legislation within months, after reviewing recommendations from a panel of experts released today. “This is not about whether children can access social media. It is about when social media can access our children,” von der Leyen said.

The panel recommended using a phased approach, including “no screens at all” for children under 3, supervised internet use for those under 13, and some limits for older teens. It also said social media platforms should have to prove their services are safe to younger users, an approach von der Leyen said she supports.

Von der Leyen said the Commission will consider the report and return with proposals “after the summer.” Any legislation would still need approval from the European Parliament and the EU’s 27 member countries before becoming law across the bloc. A formal proposal would add significant momentum to global efforts to curb children’s use of social media, joining a growing list of proposals or active regulations in countries including the UK and Australia.

New rules would also add significant pressure on platforms to demonstrate their services are safe to younger users. A preliminary investigation in the EU already found Meta to be in breach of its Digital Services Act last week over the “addictive” design of Facebook and Instagram. A similar finding was also issued against TikTok earlier this year.

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531 words analyzed.

Speakers

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Ursula von der Leyen

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No manipulation-pattern hits were found in this speaker's attributed words or the writer's voice.

Attribution is sentence-level. Pattern percentages are calculated only from words assigned to that voice.

Analysis

Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.