A government just announced the strictest social media crackdown in the world. The firms in its crosshairs watched their stocks climb. Both things happened on Monday.
What The UK Ban Covers
Prime Minister Keir Starmer made the call on Monday. The UK will block social media for anyone under 16. The list could include Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and X. Chat apps like WhatsApp and Signal would be left alone.
The UK is copying Australia's under-16 ban from last year. Then it goes further. It wants to stop livestreaming and chats with strangers for kids. Older teens get some cover too. For 16- and 17-year-olds, some guards turn on by default. The UK is even weighing overnight curfews and limits on endless scrolling.
The push follows UK cases that tied social media to teen self-harm. "We're going further than any country in the world," Starmer said. He framed it as a way to "give kids their childhood back." He also admitted the move will not be cost-free. He noted social media has done some good too.
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Why The Stocks Rose Anyway
Here is the part that does not fit. Shares of Snap, Meta, and Alphabet, which owns YouTube, all traded higher on Monday. A few things explain it.
The first rules might not land until spring 2027. That is a long time in market terms, and plenty can change before then. Kids under 16 are also not the prize for advertisers. The real money sits with adults who actually buy things.
Then there is enforcement, the hard part. Policing a ban across apps based overseas is tough. It is like a speed limit on a road you do not own. A VPN can hide where a user is. It can make a phone look like it is somewhere else. Australia saw VPN interest jump right before its own ban took hold.
What To Watch
The tech giants are pushing back. YouTube and Meta both say blanket bans send teens to less safe corners of the web. Meta points to its Teen Accounts. They add safety settings for under-18s by default. "We are taking power away from the tech giants," said tech secretary Liz Kendall.
The UK already has an Online Safety Act. It makes platforms shield kids from harmful content. Lawyers worry the new ban muddies those rules. Critics add that blanket bans just block safe, age-fit spaces. They argue kids will find a way around them. Starmer said he would also raise the issue with President Trump at the G7.
For investors, the gap is the story. A 2027 start date and fuzzy enforcement say a lot. The rule sounds bigger than it trades.
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