this post was submitted on 18 Feb 2026
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We’ve been covering Australia’s monumentally stupid social media ban for kids under 16 since before it went into effect. We noted how dumb the whole premise was, how the rollout was an immediate mess, how a gambling ad agency helped push the whole thing, and how two massive studies involving 125,000 kids found the entire “social media is inherently harmful” narrative doesn’t hold up.

But theory and data are one thing. Now we’re getting real-world stories of actual kids being harmed by a law that was supposedly designed to protect them. And wouldn’t you know it, the harm is falling hardest on the kids who were already most vulnerable. Just like many people predicted.

If you thought this was a good idea you are part of the harm against these kids, wake the fuck up and use your brain, this is a moral panic, you are hardly different than villagers yelling for a witch to be burned at the stake and you should feel ashamed of your stupidity.

Do better fediverse and if you are one of those people who casually waxes lyrical about denying kids access to the tools you use everyday because you honestly believe letting young people on social media is equivalent to giving them physically addictive drugs and that this place should have young people restricted from it because it is fundamentally unhealthy, please leave. You bring this place down and you undermine any sense of optimism about digital communities that motivates the rest of us to be here.

“The current research does not support the usefulness of banning kids from social media. Research studies do not suggest there is a correlation between time spent on social media and youth mental health. Further, reducing social media time does not improve mental health. This ban is likely to be a waste of time and resources. Further, it prevents opportunities to teach kids how to use social media responsibly. Like most moral panics, these kinds of efforts do harm in distracting us from real sources of youth mental health problems, mainly families in distress and failing schools. We have to remember we’ve been through this all before many times from video games, to rock and roll, books to the radio. These panics over media and technology never do anything to help kids.”

...

“Perhaps because of that balance and because many other factors are known to have a much larger impact on childhood, current evidence suggests very small effects at a population level when it comes to associations between social media/smartphone use on wellbeing e.g., McCrae et al., 2017; Vahedi & Zannella, 2021; Yoon et al.,2019). Note that not all the above reviews involve children. Also, that these are all reporting associations, not cause and effect.

“When it comes to the general use of social media and smartphones, the effects on mood or wellbeing are so small ‘that they require implausibly large behavioral changes to produce even minor mood shifts.’ (Winbush et al., 2025; p6)

https://www.sciencemediacentre.org/expert-comments-on-evidence-on-benefits-and-harms-of-social-media-and-social-media-bans-on-young-people/

https://news.ucsb.edu/2025/022293/brain-science-social-media-and-modern-moral-panic

https://www.theguardian.com/media/2026/jan/14/social-media-time-does-not-increase-teenagers-mental-health-problems-study

https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/europpblog/2026/01/26/social-media-age-bans-toxic-business-model/

https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2026-01-23-expert-comment-under-16-social-media-ban-right-course

https://www.aap.org/en/patient-care/media-and-children/center-of-excellence-on-social-media-and-youth-mental-health/the-good-and-bad-of-social-media-what-research-tells-us/?srsltid=AfmBOoojcZwZjG9eD7lPvXtLXnzx9iLkcNaJ0r5jbUdJZsW-ntK8HmpM

https://www.businessinsider.com/kids-parenting-social-media-bans-meta-2026-2

https://cacbrevard.org/should-teens-be-banned-from-social-media/

https://publications.ieu.asn.au/ie-220/article1/help-or-harm?cookies=true

https://medium.com/@pradeenmania123/banning-social-media-for-teens-is-dangerous-and-doomed-to-fail-7e4946f08561

https://theconversation.com/i-research-the-harm-that-can-come-to-teenagers-on-social-media-i-dont-support-a-ban-273835

https://www.humanrights.unsw.edu.au/students/blogs/australia-social-media-ban-under-16s

https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/stories/2026-01-27/a-social-media-ban-for-under-16s-would-be-popular-but-would-it-be-smart

https://www.jezebel.com/social-media-bans-teens-europe-uk-spain-greece-elon-musk-traitor-x-ai-chatbots-twitter

https://www.thedrum.com/opinion/social-media-regulation-is-being-shaped-by-fear-not-evidence

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[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz -5 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) (3 children)

Why are you here then?

How the hell are you going to ban all underage people from social media, who are you going to bestow complete authority over our digital identities to and who gets the authority to decide the details of how it is done?

You are being intellectually lazy and it shows.

if you need more information as to why, go speak to any schoolteacher in America who can't get their students to pay attention for more than 60 seconds, or who can't retain information that is literally written on the board in front of them.

https://edspace.american.edu/thecfebeat/2025/01/01/the-myth-of-the-shrinking-attention-span-shed-siliman/

Spring 2025

A few weeks ago, a YouTube short caught my attention. The short was yet another commentary on how Gen Z supposedly can’t focus on a particular thing for more than a few seconds. I scrolled through the YouTube comments and noticed a refrain: studies prove it. Everyone’s attention span is shorter, studies prove, as we become more deeply immersed in a digital, screen-filled world (insert unknown source here). Today’s teens, studies prove, bear the brunt of this crisis with an attention span shorter than that of a goldfish.

Something about that claim gnawed at me. After years of experience in the field of educational development, I knew the reality was more complicated than these sweeping generalizations. Where were these studies everyone kept referencing? What evidence existed behind this seemingly universal belief about our shrinking ability to focus?

I suspected I might find only a few studies to support the claim. I was not prepared, however, to find absolutely no evidence.

...

The only substantive research I found came from Gloria Mark, who studied digital screen use and multitasking. Her work suggested that people today switch between screens more rapidly (see her studies on attention to screens in 2004, 2012, and 2016), but this hardly proves a universal decline in human attention. The notion that attention can be measured in simple “spans” is itself questionable: as Yoo et al. (2022) state, “there is no singular neural measure of a person’s overall attentional functioning across tasks,” adding, “attention is not a unitary construct but rather multi-faceted” (p. 782).

[–] rimu@piefed.social 9 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

I was not prepared, however, to find absolutely no evidence.

Hold up, hold up.

Here are plenty of studies - https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=attention+span+social+media

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 1 points 39 minutes ago

There is nothing more low effort than linking to search results for words without any additional context or any indicators which of the search results are relevant or even necessarily support your conclusions...

[–] not_that_guy05@lemmy.world 2 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

Ok so let's use that logic of who gets the authority to decide.

As a child would it be ok for you to watch porn all day? I mean what's stopping you? The government with their R, MA, NR ratings? Why not just let children smoke? Who has the authority to question what we do with our bodies? We should be selling smokes and alcohol to minors cause why listen to anything the professionals and government says?

Why are you following those rules? That's just being intellectually lazy since others are telling you what to do.

[–] FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world -4 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

For starters, requiring ID verification. That is something that is very obviously easy for an adult to provide and for a child not to. At the end of the day, that will be for each individual country to decide.

Though I imagine over the long-term there will be more nuanced solutions.

The problem of people losing their cognitive abilities is far more consequential than a small group of people having a more difficult time because they don't socialize easily. I'm just looking at the bigger issue here.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz -2 points 12 hours ago (2 children)

The problem of people losing their cognitive abilities

Cite your sources or don't casually assert such claims

[–] CmdrShepard49@sh.itjust.works 2 points 10 hours ago (2 children)

How about this tidbit from the article you linked in the OP? I'm guessing you didn't actually read any of it past the headline because it certainly doesn't say what you seem to think it does. What an intellectually lazy thing to do.

In 2018, the World Health Organization recognized gaming disorder as a mental health condition that intrudes detrimentally into an addicted gamer’s sleep, work, education and ability to foster and maintain relationships in real life, while also impacting memory, attention span and stress management.

SOCIAL MEDIA

Social media addiction hasn’t been officially recognized, Falcione said, “but it’s pretty clear – at least within the literature – that it seems to be transposable to the extent that all the criteria for gaming disorder also apply to a social media or smartphone addiction.”

There are three main criteria, she explained. The first is that the person feels a need to use that media more and more, which can build a tolerance similar to that experienced by drug addicts. Second, she continues, “there’s a salience that it becomes the most prominent thing in your life — it’s what you think about the most, it’s what you want to do the most, and even if you’re not on your phone, you’re thinking about it, craving it and choosing it over other activities that may need your attention.” The third criteria is that its use creates internal conflict or turmoil as it interferes with relationships or obligations to work or school.

“For teens and college students, when you see those grades drop, that’s a big signal that the media use is actually becoming detrimental,” Falcione said.

[–] Mpatch@lemmy.world 1 points 1 hour ago

Don't feed the dipshit troll. It is trying to get people bent out of shape with a long-term agenda.

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 0 points 10 hours ago

Yeah, I included that to show some breadth in my evidence, but the evidence for gaming addiction is fraught with structural issues as well. Certainly people get addicted to video games, but it is also decidedly a moral panic and thus comparing social media to it weakens the case for banning it in my opinion.

[–] FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world 3 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

I don't exist to entertain you, and I don't find your ideological bent worth more of my time.

Have a pleasant evening. :)

[–] supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 0 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) (1 children)

I don't want entertainment, I want you to think harder before you resort to kneejerk reactions and I want you to cite your sources when you make bold claims.

[–] monkeyjoe@lemmy.world 2 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Giving citations is too much work for people who react based on feelings and not reality.

[–] CmdrShepard49@sh.itjust.works 1 points 10 hours ago

You mean like OP, who's clearly having a temper tantrum calling people "fucking idiots" and telling them they need to "leave" if they don't agree with them, all the while demanding sources from everyone while providing none of their own other than a single editorial written by a college student?