Social media firms must better enforce Australia under-16 ban, watchdog says
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Regulator eSafety says it has concerns about how Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube are complying with the ban.
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Social media firms must better enforce Australia under-16 ban, watchdog says 37 minutes ago Share Save Simon Atkinson Share Save The world's biggest social media companies are not doing enough to keep children in Australia off their platforms, the country's internet regulator says, despite a law that came into effect late last year. The legislation banned everyone under the age of 16 from 10 platforms, but eSafety says it has "significant concerns" about the compliance of Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube. Australia's ban was justified by campaigners and the government as necessary to protect children from harmful content and addictive algorithms. It is being closely watched, with countries including the UK looking at whether similar laws should be adopted. In its first report since the ban was instigated in December , the regulator said it had identified "a number of poor practices" from the five platforms. These include: Giving children who had declared they were aged under 16 before the ban the chance to show that they were, in fact, over 16 Enabling under-16s to repeatedly "attempt the same age assurance method" Insufficient measures to prevent new under-16s creating accounts Not providing effective ways for parents and others to report under-16s who still had access to social media Limited data has been released since the ban came into force. In January, the regulator said 4.7 million accounts had been restricted or removed in the first month since the law took effect on December 10. "While social media platforms have taken some initial action, I am concerned through our compliance monitoring that some may not be doing enough to comply with Australian law," Australia's eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said. The regulator – which had until now been monitoring the situation – says it will begin enforcing the restrictions and gathering evidence. "The evidence must establish the platform has not taken reasonable steps to prevent children aged ...
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