UN Human Rights Office issues guidelines for child safety online-Xinhua

UN Human Rights Office issues guidelines for child safety online

Source: Xinhua

Editor: huaxia

2026-05-29 23:54:00

GENEVA, May 29 (Xinhua) -- UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk on Friday called for more robust measures by both states and tech companies to make online platforms safer for children, and insisted on effective regulation, oversight and accountability.

"The digital world that connects children to learning, community, and creativity also exposes them to real risks to their safety, privacy and wellbeing," Turk said in a statement.

Turk added, "Online harms to kids' safety, privacy and wellbeing are not innate or inevitable; they result from design choices and business practices that undermine safety, including addictive design features, such as infinite scroll, autoplay, and persistent notifications from apps."

"Enhancing protection of children online is an urgent priority that we need to make sure not only gets done - but that it gets done right," he added.

"Blanket social media bans are not a one-off panacea for what is a multifaceted issue. Simply limiting access to platforms that remain unsafe cannot stand as the endpoint in effectively protecting children. " said Turk, "We need much wider action - by governments and companies - to ensure that the platforms themselves are made safer by design, that data is protected, that those responsible for harm can be held to account, and that children's rights and needs are fully respected throughout."

Türk pointed out, "States need to require tech companies to embed safety into their platforms by design, instead of shifting the burden to parents and children."

The UN Human Rights Office guidelines suggest measures including guardrails around age verification processes, mandatory child rights impact assessments, and including children when defining regulatory responses. These steps should be backed up by mandated transparency, strengthened oversight and accountability for companies, and access to remedy for children whose rights are violated.

"Whatever regulations are adopted, it is essential to avoid inadvertently causing further harms. For example, age verification done wrong can both fail at its goal and endanger the privacy of both kids and adults," Turk said.

He also noted that experience so far shows that bans can be easily circumvented and expressed concern that such bans may end up pushing children to riskier, even less monitored platforms.