Telegram CEO criticises Spain’s social media age verification proposals
Durov argued the rules would hand the state greater control over online information
Telegram’s chief executive has accused Spain of risking a 'surveillance state' after the government unveiled plans to tighten rules around children’s access to social media.
Pavel Durov, the French-Emirati founder of the messaging platform, criticised proposals that would introduce mandatory age checks and set 16 as the minimum age for using social networks.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez announced the measures at the World Government Summit in Dubai, saying platforms would be required to install age-verification systems and permanently block younger users.
But Durov warned the crackdown could come at a cost to privacy.
In a statement shared on X Wednesday, he argued the rules would hand the state greater control over online information and open the door to mass monitoring of users.
He said the plan could 'turn Spain into a surveillance state under the guise of protection'.
He also broadened his criticism to Europe more widely, claiming France was already targeting social networks and limiting online freedoms.
Sánchez has defended the move as part of a wider effort to protect children online, pointing to similar age-verification systems being adopted in other countries.
-
Google warns of state-sponsored cyberattacks targeting defense sector employees
-
Jeff Bezos hints at Blue Origin Moon plans as Elon Musk responds with cautious praise
-
South Korea blames Coupang data breach on 'management failures,' not cyber attack
-
Instagram plans new Snapchat-style app ‘Instants’ amid rising AR competition
-
Safer Internet Day 2026: Is social media ban the only way to protect kids?
-
Australia seeks urgent meeting with Roblox over 'Disturbing' content complaints
-
Cyprus joins European AI race: What it means for Greek LLMs and regional innovation
-
Amazon soon to launch 'AI content' marketplace, says report
