New Illinois Law Limits Social Media Access to Children
Initial Device set-up of age done by parents

Illinois parents are welcoming a long‑overdue law that finally puts real protections in place for children targeted by addictive social‑media platforms. For years, families have watched tech companies design apps that pull kids in with endless scrolling, constant notifications, and algorithms engineered to keep them online. This new law recognizes what parents have been warning about: children should not be exposed to systems built to manipulate their attention and emotions for profit.
For Illinois parents, this law is more than a policy shift — it is meaningful reinforcement in a battle they’ve been fighting alone. Setting limits at home has become nearly impossible when billion‑dollar platforms are designed to override parental boundaries. By restricting how these companies can track, target, and influence minors, the law strengthens the authority of parents and gives them a powerful tool to push back against digital addiction. It acknowledges that no family should have to compete with an algorithm to protect their child’s mental health.
Most importantly, this legislation restores a sense of hope and shared responsibility. Illinois parents can now feel that the state is standing with them, not leaving them to fend for themselves against predatory tech practices. With these protections in place, families can focus on raising children grounded in real relationships, real experiences, and real community — not the relentless pull of a screen. This law marks a crucial step toward healthier childhoods and stronger families across Illinois.
Click here for article: Illinois limits social media targeting for children | Belleville News-Democrat
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