Australia Readies Social Media Court Action Citing Teen Ban Breaches (reuters.com)
- Reference: 0181193412
- News link: https://yro.slashdot.org/story/26/03/31/1717242/australia-readies-social-media-court-action-citing-teen-ban-breaches
- Source link: https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/society-equity/australia-investigates-tech-giants-over-social-media-ban-compliance-2026-03-30/
> Communications Minister Anika Wells said the government was gathering evidence "so that the eSafety Commissioner can go to the Federal Court and win." "We have spent the summer building that evidence base of all the stories that no doubt you have all heard ... about how kids are getting around that," Wells told reporters in Canberra. The legal threat is a striking change of tone from a government which had hailed tech giants' shows of cooperation when the ban went live in December.
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> Under the Australian law, platforms must show they are taking reasonable steps to keep out underage users or face fines of up to $34 million per breach, something eSafety would need to pursue in a civil court. The regulator previously said it would only take enforcement action in cases of systemic noncompliance. But in its first comprehensive compliance report since the ban took effect, eSafety said measures taken by the platforms were substandard and it would make a decision about next steps by mid-year. "We are now moving Ă¢into an enforcement stance," said commissioner Julie Inman Grant in a statement.
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> The regulator reported major compliance gaps, including platforms prompting children who had previously declared ages under 16 to do fresh age checks, allowing repeated attempts at age-assurance tests until a child got a result over 16 and poor pathways for people to report underage accounts. Some platforms did not use age-inference, which estimates age based on someone's online activity, and some only used age-assurance measures like photo-based checks after a user tried to change their age, rather than at sign-up. That made it "likely many Australian children aged under 16 have been able to create accounts on age-restricted social media platforms by simply declaring they are 16 or older", the regulator said. Nearly one-third of parents reported their under-16 child had at least one social media account after the ban took effect, of which two-thirds said the platform had not asked the child's age, it added.
[1] https://www.reuters.com/sustainability/society-equity/australia-investigates-tech-giants-over-social-media-ban-compliance-2026-03-30/
[2] https://tech.slashdot.org/story/25/12/09/2112230/millions-of-australian-teens-lose-access-to-social-media-as-ban-takes-effect
Impossible to prevent (Score:2)
Once VPNs exist, it becomes impossible for a law like this to be enforced without enforcing strict age verification around the world, which is impossible given the technological state of many countries in the world (including the United States). It isn't even possible for companies to reliably comply with a law like this by blocking all access from Australia (because VPNs exist).
Once again, dumb legislators who don't understand technology have passed laws demanding something that is technologically infeas
Re: (Score:3)
Because it has NOTHING at all to do with protecting children. Getting around the bans is the point. It means they have to lock things down harder. The next setup is the OS level government ID bullshit that has already been passed in Brazil.
The end goal is that nobody can go online and view or interact with anything without a government ID token being transmitted. It's small things like this, or even the stupid California/Colorado law. They seem useless and ineffective, and that's the point. So they'll ad
For Concerned Parents (Score:1)
Use the highly effective parental controls available to you. It will stop your under 16s accessing social media and in addition will stop them from installing bypass VPN software on any devices you give them (i.e. those that you control). There is no more effective solution than parents parenting. You know how IT won't let you do anything or access anything at work? It's the same.
So easy to enforce! (Score:2)
Those kids will never figure out how to use VPNs!
Re: (Score:2)
Tell me a law that is never broken.
If that is a requirement, then you may as well remove all laws
Need to ask why it is the adults who are getting upset about the lack of children on social media....