fbpx

Type to search

Australian Bill Will Ban Social Media for Children Under 16

Albanese government to trial highest age verification system in the world, for new law that has fines up to $32m for systemic breaches


Finfluencers
Meta, the owner of Facebook, has been fined by South Korea's data privacy watchdog for giving Facebook user data to advertisers (Reuters pic)

 

Australia’s Labor government introduced a new national law on Thursday that will seek to ban social media for children under 16.

The bill will trial an age-verification system that could include biometrics or state identification to enforce a social media age check – the highest age limit set by any country – with no exemption for parental consent or pre-existing accounts.

The law, which will affect Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X (formerly Twitter) and Snapchat, proposes fines of up to A$49.5 million ($32 million) for social media platforms for systemic breaches.

 

ALSO SEE: Adani Stocks Plunge After US Charges For Bribery, Fraud

 

“This is a landmark reform. We know some kids will find workarounds, but we’re sending a message to social media companies to clean up their act,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in a statement.

But Albanese said children will have access to messaging, online gaming, and health and education related services, such as youth mental health support platform Headspace, and Alphabet’s Google Classroom and YouTube.

The opposition Liberal party plans to support the bill, though independents and the Greens party have demanded more details on the proposed law.

 

‘Harmful content risks’

The Albanese-led Labor government has been arguing excessive use of social media poses risks to physical and mental health of children, in particular the risks to girls from harmful depictions of body image, and misogynist content aimed at boys.

A number of countries have already vowed to curb social media use by children through legislation, but Australia’s policy is one of the most stringent.

France last year proposed a ban on social media for those under 15 but users were able to avoid the ban with parental consent. The United States has for decades required technology companies to seek parental consent to access the data of children under 13.

“For too many young Australians, social media can be harmful. Almost two-thirds of 14 to 17-year-old Australians have viewed extremely harmful content online, including drug abuse, suicide or self-harm,” Communications Minister Michelle Rowland told parliament on Thursday.

The law would force social media platforms, and not parents or young people, to take reasonable steps to ensure the age-verification protections are in place.

The proposed law will contain robust privacy provisions, including requiring platforms to destroy any information collected to safeguard the personal data of users, Rowland said.

“Social media has a social responsibility … that’s why we are making big changes to hold platforms to account for user safety,” Rowland said.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

Australia Plans Social Media Ban to ‘Get Children Off Devices’

Facebook Partner Says Phone Apps Spy on Users for Adverts

Investors in Musk’s X Tied to Sanctioned Putin Allies – Essanews

Australian Banks Wind Down Loans to Carbon-Intensive Projects

Chinese Censors Block ‘Wealth Flaunting’ on Social Media – NBC

TikTok Ban Would Help ‘Enemy of the People’ Facebook: Trump

Suspicion And Mistrust Continuing to Shadow TikTok

TikTok Hit With $370m EU Fine Over Children’s Data Breaches

Meta Links Chinese Law Enforcement to ‘Spamouflage’ Posts

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.