Australia is moving closer to enforcing a social media age limit, which would ban children under 16 from using platforms like Instagram and Facebook by the end of 2025.
This decision was made after Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and state leaders agreed to the age restriction at a national meeting. While Tasmania initially proposed a lower age limit of 14, it eventually accepted the nationwide standard to keep rules uniform across the country.
Prime Minister Albanese compared the ban to the successful restriction of mobile phones in schools, saying it has encouraged kids to play with each other instead of being glued to screens. If parliament passes the legislation soon, the ban will start in 12 months to allow time for preparation. Age verification trials are already underway and expected to finish by early 2025.
The government says the ban is meant to protect young people from potential harm linked to social media. Communications Minister Michelle Rowland emphasised that privacy and safety will be key in implementing the restriction. However, tech companies like Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, argue that enforcing the rule should be the responsibility of app stores, not individual platforms. They also say that current technology isn’t perfect for fully effective age checks.
Experts have mixed opinions. While some researchers warn of the risks social media can bring to young users, such as dangerous viral challenges, others worry that a strict age limit may limit positive connections young people make online, like accessing health or educational support. Minister Rowland mentioned that certain educational platforms, like YouTube Kids, might be allowed exceptions under the new law.
what’s next? Australia bans phone for kids under 15 years old.
I think that YouTube should be aloud if you have restricted mode on
good idea (kind of)
I do YouTube but not the others
I agree yeah