구두 답변 · 2026-05-06 · 국회 15
미국의 Meta 및 Alphabet 과실 판결 이후 청소년의 소셜미디어 접근 규제
Vikram Nair은 미국 법원이 Meta와 Alphabet이 플랫폼 설계에서 청소년에게 해를 끼친 데 과실이 있다고 판결한 것을 인용해, 디지털발전뉴스부가 청소년의 소셜미디어 사용을 규제할지, 나아가 금지를 고려할지 물었습니다. MDDI를 대표해 답한 Rahayu Mahzam 정무장관은 먼저 앞선 서면 답변이 이미 다뤘다고 밝힌 뒤 추가 질문에 응답했습니다: 정부는 그 판결을 참고하고 있으며 해당 발견은 「계속 쌓이는 증거 체계에 한 건을 더한 것」이고, 해악은 실재하며 정부는 진지하게 받아들인다——다만 다른 경로를 택한다: 더 효과적이고 더 오래가며 기술 진화를 견딜 수 있는 방법이라고 했습니다. 그녀는 판결이 드러낸 것은 소셜미디어의 「특정 기능과 차원」이 해를 끼친다는 것이지 플랫폼 자체가 아니므로, MDDI의 접근은 구체적 해악과 그것을 낳는 구체적 설계 특징을 겨냥하고 사용자 연령에 따라 조정한다고 강조했습니다——이는 일률적 금지보다 「더 엄격하고 더 까다롭다」고 했습니다. 싱가포르는 백지에서 시작하지 않습니다: 이미 「온라인 안전 행동 준칙」, 앱 연령 확인 도입, 지정 소셜미디어 서비스의 연차 보고 의무가 있으며 최근 이를 근거로 X와 TikTok에 조치했습니다. 다음 단계로 연령 확인을 지정 소셜미디어 서비스로 확대하고 콘텐츠에서 설계 특징으로 범위를 넓힐 예정입니다——낯선 사람의 다이렉트 메시지, 자동 재생, 과도한 사용을 유발하는 기타 기능, 그리고 「AI 동반자(AI companions)가 가져오는 신흥 위험」. 정부는 금지 선택지를 배제하지 않지만(「젊은이를 지키기 위해 무엇이든 할 것」), 전면 금지는 세계적 합의가 아닙니다——에스토니아, 벨기에, 뉴욕주는 채택하지 않았고, 호주도 법을 개정해 더 표적화되고 설계 특징에 초점을 둔 방향으로 전환했습니다.
핵심 요점
- • 미국 Meta/Alphabet 과실 판결을 참고하고 해악이 실재함을 인정
- • 구체적 해악과 설계 특징을 겨냥하고 연령으로 조정, 일률적 금지 아님
- • 기존 온라인 안전 준칙+연령 확인, 최근 X와 TikTok에 조치
- • 규제를 콘텐츠에서 설계 특징으로 확대, 「AI 동반자」 위험 포함
- • 금지를 배제하지 않으나 전면 금지는 세계적 합의 아님(에스토니아/벨기에/뉴욕/호주)
소셜미디어를 일률적으로 금지하지 않고 연령에 맞춰 조정하며 해악을 낳는 설계 특징(AI 동반자 포함)을 표적화하되 최종 금지는 배제하지 않음
청소년 온라인 안전: 콘텐츠 규제에서 설계 특징 규제로 전환, AI 동반자를 신흥 위험으로 지목, 금지는 최후 카드로 보류
“과도한 사용을 유발하는 기타 기능, AI 동반자가 가져오는 신흥 위험 등입니다. 그래서 우리는 실제로 이를 세분화하여 어떻게 개선할 수 있을지 살펴볼 것입니다.”
참여자 (2)
영어 원문
SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 2026-06-02
9 Mr Vikram Nair asked the Minister for Digital Development and Information in light of the US Court's finding that Meta and Alphabet were negligent in designing platforms that harmed young people, whether the Government will consider action to regulate young people's access to social media platforms, including a potential ban on such use.
The Minister of State for Digital Development and Information (Ms Rahayu Mahzam) (for the Minister for Digital Development and Information) : Mr Speaker, the question by Mr Vikram Nair on the Government's measures to enhance safeguards for children and adolescence when they go on social media platforms, have been addressed in the written reply to Question No 40 for oral answer as well as Question Nos 36 and 37 for written answer at yesterday's Sitting. The answer given also addresses related questions for written answer by Mr Louis Chua and Miss Elysa Chen in today's Order Paper. The Member may wish to refer to the answer given.
Mr Speaker : Mr Nair.
Mr Vikram Nair (Sembawang) : Thank you, and I thank the Minister of State for flagging the answer to me as well. So, I have a supplementary question. The answer was that the Ministry is engaging the digital service providers as well as preparing advisories for parents.
These are commendable efforts, but the judgment in the United States was actually quite damning, in that it said social media platforms, in particular, Google and Meta, were responsible for creating addictive platforms that caused mental health issues for the young plaintiff concerned. All our youths are equally exposed to these platforms and while it is helpful to, I guess, engage the alleged perpetrators as well as engage parents, it may be necessary for the Ministry to take a harder stance and draw a firm boundary, like some other countries have done, to say that social media should be restricted for young people and then you talk after that.
Ms Rahayu Mahzam : I thank the Member for the question. I just want to highlight that, indeed, we are taking reference from the judgment, from the decision, and the information that we are seeing, the findings, actually add to the growing body of evidence. We know that the harms are real and we are taking it seriously.
So, it is not that we are not doing anything. We have been acting on protecting and safeguarding our young children from the harms online.
But we take a different approach in that we also want something that is more effective. A more durable approach that will withstand the test of time and the test of evolution of the technologies. Because, as what the Member pointed out, what we have found from the decisions was that there were some specific features and dimensions of the social media platforms that actually impact the youths.
So, it is not just about saying, "Okay, none at all". There are certain dimensions of it that causes the harm. And so, our approach targets the specific harms and the specific design features that produce them, and so this is also calibrated by the age of the user. And this is actually more demanding, more rigorous than a blanket ban. Because if you just say, "Okay, do not use it at all", you may not even solve the problem. What we are trying to do is to look at what is it that is causing the harm. Our approach has always been one that is outcomes-driven.
And we have been building progressively on this. As I have said, we are not starting from a blank slate. We already have the Code of Practice for Online Safety, for the social media services. We introduced age assurance for apps and we also have the annual reporting that the designated social media services have to provide to us. In recent times, based on their reporting, we have actually acted against X and TikTok. So, that shows that there is a mechanism for us to actually take action.
Moving forward, we are going to be extending the age assurance measures to the designated social media services and looking beyond the content, to the design features. We are going to understand it a bit better. These are the things that are actually causing the harms the direct messaging from strangers, auto-play, other features that drive excessive use, emerging risks from AI companions and all that. So, we are actually going to break it down and see how we can improve it.
Having said that, we are not foreclosing the decision on a ban, because we will do whatever it takes to protect our young ones. And if there is a need for stronger action, we will take it. But we are learning robustly from many different countries. Minister Desmond Lee made reference to Estonia, his visit to Estonia. Estonia is a country that we look up to, because it is quite advanced.
And so, this idea of a blanket or social media ban is not a globally accepted position. Estonia has not applied it; in fact, I think Belgium as well as the state of New York. There are different approaches internationally. In fact, Australia has also amended its legislation to be a bit more targeted, looking at the design features.
So, firstly, we are not starting on a blank slate. We do have safeguards in place and we do not think just rushing into having a ban may necessarily be the best thing. We are not foreclosing it as a decision, but we are studying what is more effective to achieve the desired outcome that you will want to see.
Mr Speaker : Moving on. Mr Melvin Yong.