National Post

B.C. government, social media giants reach deal on online youth safety

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VICTORIA• The British Columbia government and social media giants have made what they call a “historic collaborat­ion” for youth safety online.

A joint statement from Premier David Eby and representa­tives of Meta, Google, Tiktok, X and Snap Inc., the parent of Snapchat, says they met to help young people stay safe online, one of the most important challenges facing families, government and companies.

At its first meeting earlier this month, the group says they discussed broad-scale co-operation because online predators like those who have targeted children in B.C. don’t limit themselves to just one platform.

The companies have committed to providing B.C. with so-called direct escalation channels that will allow for quick reporting of non-consensual intimate images being placed online even before a protection order is issued.

The statement says that will make it easier to get the images taken down quickly, demonstrat­ing the platforms’ commitment to protecting privacy online and “promoting responsibl­e digital behaviour.”

The meeting comes after the B.C. government put its online harms legislatio­n on hold last month because it reached an agreement with the firms to talk about solutions for protecting people’s safety and privacy online.

“Recognizin­g the shared goal of teens having safe, age-appropriat­e experience­s online, action-table participan­ts agreed that future meetings would continue to emphasize new actions to promote youth safety online,” the statement says.

Eby said during the announceme­nt of the original online harms legislatio­n in March that one of its key drivers was the death of Carson Cleland, a 12-year-old Prince George, B.C., boy who died by suicide last October after falling victim to online sextortion.

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