
The Fourcast Should the UK ban social media for under-16s?
Jan 23, 2026
Professor Caitlin Regehr, a leading voice in digital humanities and author of Smartphone Nation, joins digital journalist Sophia Smith-Galer to delve into the heated debate over banning social media for under-16s. They discuss the potential isolation of youth and the notion that a ban could alleviate tech companies of responsibility. Caitlin highlights how algorithms amplify harm, while Sophia emphasizes the need for stronger regulation over strict bans. They explore the idea of raising empowered digital citizens and the impact of parental habits on children's online experiences.
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Episode notes
Child Advocates Share Goals, Not Methods
- Child advocacy groups agree on safety but disagree on solutions for kids online.
- Some call for a ban because they say existing protections have failed and harms are increasing.
Users Are The Product, Not The Consumer
- Social media lacks the consumer protections we apply to food, cars or medicine.
- Users are treated as the product because platforms sell attention, not safety by default.
From Social Graphs To TV-Like Feeds
- Modern platforms moved from social graphs to content-first algorithms that feel like TV.
- That shift reduced community ties and increased passive, recommendation-driven consumption.



