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YouTube Shorts’ screen time tracker reflects parental concerns about short-form video

The news: YouTube added a feature to help users peel themselves away from Shorts. Mobile users can now set a timer for Shorts that will trigger a notification and pause any videos currently playing—though the notification can be easily dismissed, putting the onus on users to stop watching.

The timer will be added to parental controls later this year, per YouTube; TikTok and Reels have similar features.

Zooming out: Short-form video has an iron grip on user attention—especially among younger demographics.

  • 32% of US teens ages 13 to 17 say they spend 30 minutes to 1 hour daily with YouTube Shorts, more than TikTok (28%) and standard YouTube (21%), per a June Precise TV survey.
  • In a March 2024 Numerator survey, parents reported that YouTube was the top platform their children spent time on across age groups: 60% for parents with children ages 11 to 14 and 50% for parents of children ages 6 to 10.
  • 26% said YouTube was the top platform even for children ages 1 to 5—a sign of how successfully YouTube Kids cements viewing behaviors in children.

Why this matters: Companies like Alphabet and Meta are boldly brandishing their market power this year, withdrawing from fact-checking and brand safety initiatives. But YouTube’s (and other short-form platforms’) usage timers shows there is still one cohort that social platforms feel pressure from—parents.

Earlier this year, a bipartisan group of senators introduced the Kids Off Social Media Act, which would prevent social media platforms from harvesting minors’ data and allowing users under 13 to make accounts, among other restrictions.

  • The bill has support from multiple parents organizations: A 2023 Count on Mothers survey of more than 300 mothers in 44 states found that 90% agree social media should have a minimum age of 13, and 87% agree that platforms should not be able to recommend personalized content to minors.
  • Additionally, 55% of parents said they are extremely or very concerned about teen mental health, and 44% say social media has the largest negative impact on teens today, per an April 2025 Pew Research Survey.

Those concerns were aired out last year in a fiery January Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, when social media CEOs including Mark Zuckerberg and Evan Spiegel were grilled by a bipartisan panel on failures to protect underage users. Conservative politicians were scathing:

  • Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) pressured Zuckerberg to apologize on the spot to parents of affected teens.
  • Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) chastised Meta for estimating teen users’ lifetime value.
  • And Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA) called social media a “killing field.”

Though Republicans were the Senate minority at the time, last year’s heated questioning suggests that conservative legislators will continue to use child safety and parental concerns as a cudgel against social platforms.

What this means for digital video platforms: YouTube’s timer shows short-form’s addictive nature is a double-edged sword for both video platforms and advertisers alike, who could face intense scrutiny from parents—and thus regulators—over teen viewing habits.

Parental controls like timers serve the double purpose of giving platforms a flag to wave when criticism spikes and reassuring advertisers that impressions aren’t coming at the cost of teen health or goodwill with parents.

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