Yesterday, the Australian government introduced legislation in 
Parliament that would ban children under 16 from accessing social media 
platforms. The claim is the bill is to protect young people from the 
negative impacts of excessive social media use, including mental health 
concerns, body image issues and exposure to harmful content. But this is
 the excuse, not the motive.
The proposed law is an amendment to Australia’s Online Safety Act.
  It sets a minimum age limit of 16 for accessing social media 
platforms. If passed, the law would outline some of the toughest 
controls so far on social media platforms imposed by a country. 
The
 obvious problem with such a bill, without seeing any details, is what’s
 to stop the Government from expanding the law into other areas?  
Nothing.  As Freezenet explains a very familiar maxim that is well known
 among those who work for the Government, “Once you have a hammer, 
everything looks like a nail.” 
Until the bill was introduced 
into parliament, details of how the ban would actually work had been 
scarce. “Today’s bill provides a more complete picture. But many 
ambiguities – and problems – still remain,” The Conversation noted. 
Under
 the proposed law, social media companies will be required to 
demonstrate they are taking “reasonable steps” to prevent access for 
under-16s. Penalties will be imposed on platforms that fail to comply. 
The eSafety Commissioner will be responsible for enforcing the new laws 
and monitoring compliance.  The bill proposes a fine of up to AU$50 million on social media platforms if they fail to uphold the ban. 
Interestingly,
 platforms which are most likely to be used by children without adult 
supervision are exempt.  According to The Conversation the bill 
“includes an exclusion framework that exempts messaging apps … online 
gaming platforms and services with the ‘primary purpose of supporting 
the health and education of end-users’.”  Some platforms that will be 
exempt include Google-owned YouTube, Google Classroom, Meta’s WhatsApp 
and Headspace, a non-profit organisation for youth mental health established by the Australian Government in 2006. 
Additionally,
 “the bill won’t stop people under 16 from watching videos on YouTube or
 seeing content on Facebook – it is primarily designed to stop them from
 making an account.”...<<<Read More>>>...
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