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Italian bill proposes curbs on social media addiction

By Thomson Reuters Apr 1, 2026 | 11:17 AM

ROME, April 1 (Reuters) – Italian senators on Wednesday presented a draft law to tackle social media addiction that seeks to increase the responsibility of online ​platforms for the way content is distributed to ‌users.

It comes amid growing scrutiny across Europe of digital platforms and follows a U.S. ruling last month that found Meta and Alphabet’s Google negligent for designing social media platforms deemed harmful to young ‌people.

The ​proposal, backed by the opposition Democratic ⁠Party (PD), would require platforms ⁠to stop profiling users by default and provide greater transparency over how algorithms determine the content shown to users.

“Every time we open a social network, an algorithm ​decides what we see – not by chance, but to keep us glued to the screen for as long ⁠as possible,” PD Senator Antonio Nicita ⁠said in a statement.

The bill seeks to ​hold platforms accountable for the design of the systems they ​use to distribute content. “Algorithmic design is not a technical ‌detail. It is a corporate choice with consequences,” the draft law states.

There was no immediate comment on the bill from members of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s conservative coalition, ⁠but Nicita, a former member of the Italian communications watchdog Agcom, was hopeful it could have cross-party support.

“This is a bipartisan ⁠issue, and at ‌the moment everyone agrees on banning certain ⁠practices for minors,” he said, adding that ​the ‌real issue that needed addressing was the ​design of ⁠algorithms, rather than social media content.

In a separate proposal, the co-ruling League party has proposed a social media ban for children under 14, following similar moves adopted or under discussion in several other countries.

(Reporting by Giselda Vagnoni, editing by ​Alvise Armellini/Keith Weir)