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Social media contributed to our son's murder
Image source, Family Handout Image caption, Joshua Hall was 17 when he was murdered by a 15-year-old boy who is now serving a 14-year prison sentence By Edward Rowe , Gloucestershire Political Reporter  and  Joe Skirkowski , West of England Published 1 hour ago The parents of a teenager who was murdered by another boy have said they believe social media played a role in his death and have welcomed the proposed ban for under-16s. Joshua Hall was 17 when he was stabbed by a 15-year-old after meeting to "sort out their differences" in relation to alleged comments made about a girl â something his family said may not have happened without online contact. "Without social media Josh may still be alive today," his father, Michael Hall, from Cam, near Dursley in Gloucestershire, said. Michael and Kirsty Hall recently spoke of their anger that the killer had been posting on social media from prison. More from Gloucestershire Thieves steal diggers and trailers worth £35,000 Published 17 hours ago 'I'm probably UK's oldest working comedian - I love it' Published 1 day ago Heatwave end in sight but disruption continues Published 1 day ago 'We're losing a generation' Joshua's parents said they were increasingly concerned about the impact social media was having on young people. "I truly believe social media will become the smoking of our time," Michael Hall said. "We're losing a generation of kids." Kirsty Hall said online platforms had made it easier for strangers and acquaintances to contact young people. "Social media gives everyone access to your child," she said. "Whether that's TikTok or someone on Snapchat who has an iPhone and wants to meet you in a park." Image caption, Kirsty and Michael Hall (pictured) organise charity events in memory of Joshua Joshuaâs parents believe social media can influence behaviour and escalate conflicts in the real world. They have welcomed proposals to introduce restrictions on social media use for underâ16s. Other families have raised similar concerns, including Cheltenham mother Ellen Roome , whose son Jools died in what she believes was an online challenge gone wrong. Experts have said the relationship between social media and violence is complex, but concerns about its impact on young people are growing. Hannah Swirsky, head of policy and public affairs at the Internet Watch Foundation, said: "The point to really highlight is that we need age appropriate experiences and a safer internet, no single piece of legislation is going to turn the tide. "Itâs clear that there are a number of harms associated with a lack of safeguards on platforms and I would say itâs really important that there are interventions at every stage of the harm pathway. "Itâs right that effort is being put into this, I think itâs a question of 'what are all the different things that need to happen'.â Swirsky believes that one area that the new legislation fails to tackle is restrictions on messaging platforms. "We see a lot of i