Youngsters are routinely uncovered to adverts for weight-loss injections, food plan merchandise and beauty procedures on-line, based on a brand new report by Dame Rachel de Souza, who has known as for harder regulation of social media platforms.
The report, primarily based on a survey of two,000 youngsters aged 13 to 17 alongside focus teams, discovered that younger individuals had been being “bombarded” with content material selling physique transformation, regardless of restrictions on sure varieties of promoting.
Respondents reported seeing advertisements for weight-loss medication and food plan merchandise, in addition to skin-lightening therapies, a few of that are unlawful to promote within the UK. Others described magnificence and beauty content material, together with promotions for lip fillers and aesthetic procedures, as “unavoidable” throughout main social media platforms.
Dame Rachel stated the content material was “immensely damaging” to younger individuals’s vanity and urged ministers to contemplate a ban on focused social media promoting to youngsters.
“We can not proceed to simply accept an internet world that earnings from youngsters’s insecurities and continually tells them they should change,” she stated. “Pressing motion is required to create an internet surroundings that’s actually safer by design.”
The findings come amid the rollout of the On-line Security Act, which goals to make the web safer for customers, significantly youngsters, by inserting duties on platforms to take away dangerous materials shortly.
Dame Rachel’s report suggests amending the Act to introduce a clearer “responsibility of care” obliging platforms to forestall youngsters from being proven body-image associated promoting within the first place. She additionally really useful modifications to Ofcom’s Youngsters’s Code of Follow to explicitly shield younger customers from “physique stigma” content material.
Ofcom stated such materials is already lined underneath its present code. “Physique stigma content material could be extremely dangerous to youngsters, which is why our guidelines require websites and apps to guard youngsters from encountering it and to behave swiftly once they change into conscious of it,” a spokesperson stated. The regulator added it will not tolerate know-how companies “prioritising engagement over youngsters’s on-line security”.
The commissioner additionally known as for stronger enforcement of guidelines governing the web sale of age-restricted merchandise and urged the federal government contemplate limiting youngsters’s entry to sure social media platforms altogether.
Dr Peter Macaulay, senior lecturer in psychology on the College of Derby, stated limiting promoting to youngsters was a crucial step however not adequate by itself. “We additionally want stronger platform accountability, improved enforcement of age-appropriate design requirements and higher training to assist youngsters critically navigate on-line pressures,” he stated.
A authorities spokesperson stated ministers had at all times been clear that the On-line Security Act was “not the tip of the dialog” and confirmed {that a} nationwide session had been launched on additional measures, together with the potential of banning social media use for under-16s.
The controversy highlights rising concern amongst policymakers in regards to the industrial drivers behind youth-facing content material, as platforms face mounting strain to display that their enterprise fashions don’t undermine youngsters’s psychological well being.

