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Britain’s National Crime Agency (NCA) and National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC) have urged the government to block under-16s from social media, gaming and AI apps that retain so-called “high-risk” features, in statements issued on May 24-25, 2026.
The agencies want platforms to disable or remove features they say enable harm: direct contact with strangers, private or encrypted messaging, recommendation algorithms that surface harmful content, sharing of nude images, weak age verification and ease of discovery of children by other users.
They cited sharply rising online child sexual abuse referrals in 2025 (around 92,000–100,000) and agency estimates that about 840,000 adults in the UK pose a sexual risk to children online.
Police said they prefer platforms to make services child-safe through mandatory age verification and device-level nudity controls but said government should ban access for under-16s where companies fail to act.
The calls come amid an ongoing government consultation on age limits and wider powers for Ofcom to enforce the Online Safety Act.
Agencies acknowledged technical and privacy trade-offs, but said industry action has been too slow to protect children.





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