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As Australia prepares to ban anyone under 16 from holding accounts on major social platforms from December 10 2025, the question remains: will this protect young minds or push them into riskier online corners?
Companies that fail to enforce the ban may face fines of up to A$49.5 million.
Sydney: Australia will bring into force a landmark regulation starting 10 December 2025, under which anyone under the age of 16 will be banned from creating or maintaining social media accounts. The move follows mounting concerns over the mental-health risks, addictive algorithms and exposure to harmful content faced by young users, and places the responsibility squarely on tech companies to police access rather than on parents or children themselves.
Under the law, platforms are required to take “reasonable steps” to:
Potential benefits:
Potential drawbacks:
From a policy-standpoint, Australia is positioning itself as a pioneer by treating social-media access for children as a public-health and safety issue. The move is mature in its intent: acknowledge the rising concerns about children’s mental health, screen addiction and exposure to harmful content.
That said, the success of this law will hinge on its implementation. The reliance on platforms’ “reasonable steps” rather than a rigid verification mandate means much depends on how tech firms respond and how regulators enforce compliance. Without effective mechanisms, intentions may fall short of outcomes.
In short: yes, the move is beneficial in principle, as it prioritises children’s development and safety. But the maturity of the approach will be judged by how safeguards, enforcement and the unintended consequences are handled in real-world scenarios.
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The government has pledged that within two years of the law’s start date, it will initiate an independent review of its operations and impact. Tech companies are already in consultation about how to handle age‐verification, account de-activation and appeal processes. The regulator will monitor whether platforms are making meaningful changes. Meanwhile, the world is watching whether Australia’s novel experiment will set a template for other nations or reveal key limitations.
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