Relevance: GS II (Governance) & GS III (Cyber Security) | Source: The Indian Express
1. What is the News?
A landmark U.S. court verdict fined tech giants (Meta and YouTube) $6 million for deliberately designing “addictive” social media products that harmed a minor’s mental health. This legally shifts the blame from user “screen time” to unsafe platform “design.”
2. The Core Issue: Engineered Addiction
Companies are accused of designing platforms to maximize user attention for ad revenue using:
- Algorithmic Recommendations: Feeding content users cannot stop watching.
- Infinite Scrolling: Removing the “bottom” of a page so the brain misses natural stopping cues.
3. India’s Legal Shield
Unlike Australia (which banned social media for children under 16), India takes a step-by-step regulatory approach:
| Law | Protection for Minors |
| DPDP Act, 2023 | Defines anyone under 18 as a child. Mandates verifiable parental consent and completely bans tracking or targeted ads directed at children. |
| POCSO Act, 2012 | Penalizes the online “grooming” and sexual exploitation of minors. |
4. The Implementation Challenge
- “Age-Gating” Failure: Children easily bypass rules by faking their birth year.
- The Privacy Dilemma: If platforms force users to upload government IDs (like Aadhaar) to verify age, it creates a massive surveillance and privacy risk for everyone.
UPSC Value Box
| Key Term / Law | Simple Meaning for Exam |
| Age-Gating | Technical systems used by websites to restrict access to digital content based on a user’s self-reported age. |
| DPDP Act, 2023 | Digital Personal Data Protection Act. The nodal law protecting Indian citizens’ digital privacy, with special strict provisions for minors. |
With reference to the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act, 2023, consider the following statements:
- The Act explicitly bans targeted advertising and behavioral tracking directed at children.
- Under the provisions of the Act, a “child” is defined as any individual below the age of 16 years.
- Social media platforms must obtain verifiable parental or guardian consent before processing the personal data of a child.
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 1 and 3 only
(c) 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
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