Spain wants to regulate parent influencers. Spanish Ministers are drafting a new law to restrict abuse of “sharenting,” or parents posting images of their kids on social media. The bill aims to regulate work for the youngest content creators and ensure that children’s images are monetized with safeguards in place. The proposed measures include limiting when minors can “work” on social media and requiring earnings from child influencers to be held in a financial institution until they turn 18-years-old. This follows similar efforts in Europe such as France’s regulations on child influencers and Spain’s other influencer income regulations. (The Local)
📊 YPulse data: 20% of European 13-17-year-olds consider themselves an “influencer” to their audience
