Australia made history in late 2024 C.E. when its parliament passed legislation banning children under the age of 16 from using social media platforms — the first nationwide law of its kind anywhere in the world. The move shifts legal responsibility away from families and onto the platforms themselves, requiring companies like Meta, TikTok, and Snapchat to verify users’ ages or face significant financial penalties.
At a glance
- Australia social media ban: The law requires platforms to take “reasonable steps” to prevent under-16s from creating accounts, with fines of up to AUD $50 million for companies that repeatedly fail to comply.
- Age verification burden: Under the new legislation, it is the platform’s responsibility — not the child’s or the parent’s — to enforce age limits, a significant departure from how online rules have historically been applied.
- Global precedent: No other country had passed a law this sweeping before Australia’s parliament voted in November 2024 C.E., drawing immediate attention from lawmakers in the U.K., the U.S., and the E.U.
Why this moment matters
For years, child safety advocates, psychologists, and parents around the world have raised alarms about the effects of social media on young people’s mental health. Studies have linked heavy platform use among adolescents to increased rates of anxiety, depression, and sleep disruption. Yet until now, the dominant regulatory approach in most countries was to nudge platforms toward voluntary safety commitments — commitments that critics said were routinely under-enforced.
Australia’s law changes that calculus. By making platforms legally liable for underage access, it treats the companies — not children or their families — as the responsible party. That framing alone represents a meaningful shift in how democratic governments are choosing to engage with the power of Big Tech.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who championed the legislation, argued that children deserve a childhood protected from the pressures of algorithmically driven social feeds. The bill passed both houses of parliament with strong cross-party support, a rare show of political unity in an era of sharp divisions.
How the law works
Platforms operating in Australia will be required to implement age-verification systems robust enough to keep under-16s off their services. The law gives companies a one-year implementation window before enforcement begins, acknowledging that no perfect technical solution currently exists at scale.
The government has indicated it will work with an independent regulator — the eSafety Commissioner — to assess and certify compliant age-assurance technologies. Companies that fail to meet the standard repeatedly could face fines reaching AUD $50 million, a sum large enough to get the attention of even the world’s largest platforms.
Existing accounts held by under-16s will need to be removed. Platforms that knowingly allow minors to maintain accounts after the grace period expires will be in direct violation of the law.
A model other countries are watching
The passage of the law set off immediate reverberations beyond Australia’s borders. Legislators in the U.K., where the Online Safety Act already includes some child protections, began discussing whether similar age-gate requirements could be incorporated into future amendments. In the U.S., where bipartisan children’s online safety bills have moved through the Senate, Australian advocates’ success gave momentum to advocates who had long pushed for stronger federal action.
The UNICEF State of the World’s Children 2023 report highlighted the urgent need for governments to take a more proactive role in protecting children’s digital rights and wellbeing — a framing that Australia’s law directly answers.
There is also growing interest from governments in the Global South, where smartphone access among young people has expanded rapidly but protective infrastructure has lagged. Australia’s law, whatever its limitations, provides a template that can be studied, adapted, and improved upon.
Honest questions remain
The law is not without its critics, and the concerns deserve serious consideration. Digital rights organizations have raised legitimate questions about what age-verification systems will mean for user privacy — any system capable of confirming a user’s age necessarily involves collecting sensitive personal data. There are also open questions about whether determined teenagers will simply use VPNs or other workarounds to circumvent the restrictions, as many already do with existing content filters.
Some child development researchers have noted that social media is not uniformly harmful — for LGBTQ+ youth, in particular, online communities can provide vital connection and support that may not be available in their immediate physical environments. A blanket ban risks cutting off those lifelines along with the harms.
The implementation details will matter enormously. A law that is poorly enforced or that creates privacy risks of its own could do more harm than good. Australia’s eSafety Commissioner will carry significant responsibility in the years ahead.
Still, the underlying instinct — that children deserve protection from systems designed by billion-dollar companies to maximize engagement at any cost — is one that resonates across political lines and national borders. Australia has drawn a line. Whether it holds, and whether others follow, will be one of the defining technology policy stories of the coming decade.
Read more
For more on this story, see: Reuters
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana creates a major new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Alzheimer’s risk cut in half by drug in landmark prevention trial
- The Good News for Humankind archive on Australia
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