Australian lawmakers moved closer to banning under 16s from social media platforms Wednesday, threatening companies that fail to comply with multimillion-dollar fines.
The landmark legislation passed parliamentโs lower chamber Wednesday and is now set to be debated by the Senate.
The new rules would require Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and Snapchat to take โreasonable stepsโ to prevent young teens from having accounts.
Social media firms โ who could face fines of up to Aus$50 million (US$32.5 million) for failing to impose the ban โ have described the laws as โvagueโ, โproblematicโ and โrushedโ.
Centre-left Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who is eyeing an election early next year, has enthusiastically championed the ban and rallied Aussie parents to support it.
In the run-up to Wednesdayโs vote, he painted social media as โa platform for peer pressure, a driver of anxiety, a vehicle for scammers and, worst of all, a tool for online predatorsโ.
He wanted, he said, young Australians โoff their phones and onto the footy and cricket field, the tennis and netball courts, in the swimming poolโ.
On paper, the ban is one of the strictest in the world.
However, the current legislation offers almost no details on how the rules will be enforced.
It will be at least 12 months before the details are worked out by regulators and the ban comes into effect.
Many experts are sceptical that the ban can be implemented in any meaningful way, pointing out that many age restrictions can easily be easily circumvented.
Late amendments explicitly bar social media firms from requiring new users to present government-issued ID to prove their age.
University of Sydney digital communication professor Terry Flew said the limited consultation could result in โsymbolic policy-makingโ rather than a lasting legacy.
The ban may well be challenged in court.
Some companies will likely be granted exemptions, such as WhatsApp and YouTube, which teenagers may need to use for recreation, school work or other reasons.
Business networking site LinkedIn is also looking for an exemption, presenting the novel argument that its product is too boring for those under 16 to be interested in joining anyway.
โLinkedIn simply does not have content interesting and appealing to minors,โ the firm said in a submission to the government.
โ โKnee-jerk reactionโ โ
Social media expert Susan Grantham said the legislation was a โknee-jerk reactionโ and a blanket ban on social media may work in the short term, but it would likely have unintended consequences.
This included isolating young people who rely on online communities, or adults posting more inappropriate content on social media in the belief that children have been removed.
โBut young people are going to get in anyways,โ Grantham told AFP.
โThey might create their own versions of these platforms and that becomes an extremely dangerous, unregulated environment.โ
Instead, Grantham said better educational digital literacy programmes were needed โ similar to Finlandโs model where five-year-old children learn to think โcriticallyโ about what they see online.
The legislation will be closely monitored by other countries, with many weighing whether to implement similar bans.
Lawmakers from Spain to Florida have proposed social media bans for young teens, although none of the measures have been implemented yet.
China has restricted access for minors since 2021, with under-14s not allowed to spend more than 40 minutes a day on Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok.
Online gaming time for children is also limited in China.
AFP
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