The United Arab Emirates has implemented a groundbreaking Child Digital Safety Law that fundamentally reshapes parental responsibilities in the digital realm. This legislation marks a significant shift from reactive measures to proactive prevention, establishing clear legal expectations for both digital platforms and families.
Under the new regulatory framework, parents now carry a legal obligation to provide reasonable supervision of their children’s digital interactions. This mandate encompasses knowing which applications and platforms children use, ensuring age-appropriate content, implementing basic parental controls, and maintaining open communication about online safety practices. Crucially, the law distinguishes between reasonable supervision and constant surveillance, emphasizing guidance over invasive monitoring.
Legal experts clarify that the legislation primarily targets service providers rather than families. Sarah Greenstreet, technology and data protection lawyer at Addleshaw Goddard, explains: “This law signals the UAE government’s serious commitment to children’s online safety, recognizing that digital spaces require the same protection standards as physical environments.”
The law broadly defines harmful content as any material negatively affecting a child’s moral, psychological, or social wellbeing. This expanded definition includes content promoting unhealthy body standards, encouraging excessive screen time, subtly pressuring information sharing, or normalizing risky behaviors. The legislation also addresses harmful behaviors including harassment, grooming, and exploitation.
Practical implementation recommendations include establishing separate, age-appropriate accounts for children rather than sharing adult accounts, which could be interpreted as failing to meet supervision requirements. For younger children, experts recommend maintaining direct parental control over messaging platforms accessed through parental devices.
Digital security professionals emphasize that effective supervision doesn’t require technical expertise. Morey Haber, Chief Security Advisor at BeyondTrust, notes: “Parents have numerous tools at their disposal—operating system controls, browser filters, antivirus solutions, and router-level protections.”
Psychological experts stress that successful implementation relies on supportive communication rather than punitive measures. Rema Menon Vellat of Counselling Point Training and Development advises: “Supervision works best when children feel comfortable sharing concerns without fear of punishment or device confiscation.”
The law represents a cultural shift toward recognizing digital access as an ongoing responsibility rather than a one-time permission. It positions parents as guides in the digital landscape while creating safer default environments through platform-level protections and stricter data handling requirements for children under 13.
