Simply put, Snapchat is failing kids — plain and simple. The platform lets children under 13 sign up with a single self-declaration, automatically recommends teens to strangers and keeps push notifications on by default, creating a playground for groomers and drug dealers. The EU's Digital Services Act exists precisely for this moment, and enforcement isn't overreach — it's the bare minimum owed to every child online.
FramingThe everyEU child-safetyis pushhiding as unambiguous good ignores where the EU's regulatory machinery is actually headed. TheIts proposedinvestigations CSAand Regulationlegislation wouldare forceaimed at forcing client-side scanning of encrypted messages. —The what the EU's own legal service calledcalls it general and indiscriminate surveillance — and once that infrastructure exists, mission creep is inevitable. Real child protection means targeted policing and funded enforcement, not suspicionless scans of everyone's private life.
There's a 30% chance that the EU require mandatory age verification on social media or AI before 2027, according to the Metaculus prediction community.
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