Albania joins a growing list of countries banning or Watch Passenger 69 XXXtemporarily blocking TikTok, with the state declaring a one-year prohibition of the platform.
The decision comes after nationwide protest and government unrest following the November murder of a 14-year-old boy by one of his classmates, who subsequently shared images of the aftermath on Snapchat. Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama has claimed that social media, but most specifically TikTok, is fostering increasing violence among youth in the country. "TikTok will not exist in the Republic of Albania," said Rama. "TikTok is the thug of the neighborhood. We are going to chase this thug out of our neighborhood for one year."
SEE ALSO: Which countries have banned TikTok?This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
In addition to the ban, Rama said the government will introduce new programs to educate children and support parents — the country's leader had been meeting with teachers, students, parents, and psychologists over the last month to address growing fear about social media and children. No further details were provided at the time.
Other countries are exploring stricter laws intended to safeguard minors from social media platforms broadly, working these issues into larger claims for digital and national security. Countries across North America, Europe, and Asia have instituted varying restrictions on TikTok. The U.S. TikTok divestiture requirement, a de facto ban, is set to go into effect on Jan. 19, and is currently set to be appealed in the Supreme Court, with TikTok and others claiming its a violation of free speech. In May, a bipartisan group of legislators introduced a bill that would prohibit social media use for people 13 years and younger.
In November, Australia passed an outright ban on social media use for children under 16 years of age, placing the onus of keeping said users off platforms on social media companies themselves. The ban will apply to Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, X, and YouTube, among others. The U.K. is currently debating a similar social media ban.
Experts, however, are mixed on whether social media bans are the way forward. A major report out of the nonprofit National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine declined to recommend banning platforms, arguing current research into social media's connection to negative mental health outcomes isn't robust enough to suggest a direct cause-and-effect relationship. Instead, the committee argues, legislators should explore strong industry standards and transparency.
Topics Social Good TikTok Politics
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT mini crossword answers for January 3, 2025
Google had a glorious explanation for this cow's blurred face in Street View
This startup wants to be the Airbnb of assisted living
Uranus is weird and researchers think a giant collision caused it
Segway Xyber is a wickedly quick e
Elon Musk uses Twitter to defend calling British cave diver 'pedo guy'
18 of the best books written by women in 2018
Kindle Rewards double points day: Here's how it works
'Fallout 76' players can get three old Fallout games for free
How to unblock XVideos for free
I ate 100 different 'pigs in blankets' at a sausage party and it was painfully delicious
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。