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Social networks: the Assembly votes to protect the image rights of children

2023-03-06T18:30:27.631Z


The National Assembly adopted on Monday at first reading a bill aimed at better protecting the image rights of children against...


The National Assembly adopted on Monday at first reading a bill aimed at better protecting the image rights of children in the face of the excesses of certain parents who expose them excessively on social networks.

The text, carried by the Macronist deputy Bruno Studer (Renaissance) and supported by the government, was adopted unanimously in a rare consensual climate in the hemicycle.

It must now be considered in the Senate.

It introduces the notion of the child's “private life” into the definition of parental authority in the Civil Code, to underline the parents' duty to respect it.

And specifies that the right to the image of the minor is exercised jointly by the two parents taking into account the opinion of the child.

Parents do not have an absolute right

If there is a disagreement between parents, the text provides that the judge may prohibit one of them “

from publishing or distributing any content without the authorization of the other

”.

In serious cases of violation of dignity, the text opens the way "

to a forced delegation of parental authority

", giving the possibility to a judge to entrust the exercise of the right to the image of the child to a third.

This law aims to "

make parents responsible

" but also to show minors that "

parents do not have an absolute right over their image

", argued MP Studer.

Misappropriation of images, exposure to competition

According to figures cited by parliamentarians and the executive, a child appears on average "

out of 1300 photographs published online before the age of 13

" and "

50% of the photographs which are exchanged on child pornography forums had been initially published by parents on their social networks

.

Associations denounce abuses, such as those of family “

vlogs

” (video blogs) kept by parents racing for “

likes

” by exposing the privacy of their children, sometimes in search of advertising revenue.

Until resorting to degrading stagings, such as those of the “

Cheese Challenge

”, viral on TikTok, consisting in throwing a slice of melted cheese in the face of a baby and filming his reaction.

Certain images of children can lead to "

cyberbullying

" or to "

compromising their credibility for future school or professional applications

", also underlined the Minister of Justice Éric Dupond-Moretti who gave his support "

with strength and conviction

" .

to the text.

The latter is an extension of a law on "

child influencers

" passed in 2020 by Parliament, already supported by MP Studer, to regulate the hours and income of minors whose image is broadcast on platforms. videos.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2023-03-06

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