A new Child Digital Safety Law is quietly reshaping how children experience the online world in the UAE—and redefining the role parents play in guiding them through it.
Rather than punishing families, the law places legal accountability on apps, games, and social media platforms, requiring them to prevent harm before it occurs. For parents, the expectation is clear but balanced: exercise reasonable supervision over children’s digital activity.
This does not mean tracking every message or banning devices. Experts say it means staying informed about the platforms children use, setting age-appropriate controls, maintaining open conversations about online behaviour, and teaching children how to recognise and report uncomfortable situations.
One significant change involves account sharing. Allowing children to use adult profiles may now be viewed as failing to supervise responsibly, as it bypasses built-in safety protections. Specialists recommend that children always have their own accounts, created together with parents.
The law also broadens the definition of harmful content, recognising that harm can be emotional or psychological—not just explicit. Content that promotes unhealthy self-image, encourages oversharing, or exposes children to inappropriate interactions may now fall under regulatory scrutiny.
Children themselves may notice safer defaults, fewer disturbing videos, stronger filters, and more limits on contact with strangers. Behind the scenes, platforms must also reduce how children’s data is collected, stored, and used.
Experts emphasise that effective supervision works best through trust and dialogue, not fear or control. When children feel supported rather than policed, they are more likely to speak up and make safer choices online.
In essence, the law signals a cultural shift: digital access is no longer a one-time permission, but a shared, evolving responsibility between platforms, parents, and children.















































