Liberal Party Members Vote for Minimum Age of 16 on Social Media Accounts at National Convention
Grassroots members of the Liberal Party gathered in Montreal for their national convention and voted in favor of resolutions to restrict social media and AI chatbot access for those under 16. The resolutions place responsibility on platform companies to prevent underage accounts. Toronto teens, parents, and counsellors expressed views on the potential challenges of implementation.
Substrate placeholder — needs reviewThe convention included discussions on various policy proposals, such as age restrictions for social media and AI chatbots. On Saturday, members voted in favor of a resolution to establish a minimum age of 16 for creating social media accounts.
The resolution requires companies operating social media platforms to prevent users under 16 from holding accounts. A separate resolution proposes banning access to all AI chatbots and other potentially harmful AI interactions for individuals under 16, including tools from OpenAI such as ChatGPT. These measures aim to address concerns related to youth online activity.
teens, parents, and counsellors have shared opinions on the feasibility of these restrictions.
One 17-year-old teen described starting an Instagram account in grade eight to focus on books, which helped build a community and led to real-life experiences in the literary field. The teen now participates in a co-op placement with a literary media company and aspires to a career in the industry. The proposed rules would not affect the teen directly, given their age.
However, the teen noted observing addiction to social media among peers, with some unable to go more than three minutes without checking their phones. The teen attributed their positive experience to personal maturity and parental guidance on safety. The teen's father emphasized the role of parental involvement in children's social media use.
He stated that parents should allow freedoms while maintaining open discussions about safety. He added that the issue lies in education rather than the technology itself, as online spaces contain both positive and negative elements.
The teen expressed concerns about enforcement, noting that teenagers often find creative ways to circumvent restrictions.
The teen suggested balancing the benefits and risks of social media, as misuse can be harmful to both teens and adults. Jessica Zeyl, owner of the Toronto Counselling Centre for Teens, indicated uncertainty about whether a new policy would fully address social media issues. She welcomed increased attention to the topic.
Zeyl, who is also a parent of two teenagers, highlighted concerns including addiction, bullying, virtual exclusion, and verification of artificially generated content. Zeyl described social media as both helpful and harmful to teens. She noted the close integration of phones into daily life.
Enforcement is complicated, she said, because teens possess significant skills in using social media, potentially bypassing parental monitoring.
Transparency
Mild framing through selective sourcing of skeptical perspectives, emphasizing enforcement challenges without strong counterpoints to the policy's intent.
Selective sourcing: Dominant skeptical viewpoint skews toward feasibility concerns
The proposed ban could effectively protect young users from social media's addictive and harmful effects by enforcing age limits and parental oversight.
Reported by a single outlet. This score reflects source tier and factual specificity — corroboration is limited with one source.
Sources framed at 28 → our rewrite 22. We stripped 6 points of framing the sources carried in.
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