Australia considers tougher enforcement of social media ban for teens

Australia’s prime minister ​said on Friday he was keen to make sure the country’s social media ban ‌for children was as strong as possible, as a new study found that the measure — the first of its kind and now six months old — had little impact on teen use.
The government plans to stress-test the law which bans platforms ​like Meta’s (META.O), Instagram and Google’s (GOOGL.O), YouTube from giving under-16s accounts.

“What we want to do is ​to make sure that the laws are as strong as possible and that they ⁠will withstand any legal challenges which are made,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told the Australian Broadcasting ​Corp.
He added that one key focus would be making sure that the eSafety Commission, the country’s internet regulator, ​was sufficiently empowered to do the job.
Albanese did not give further details about what steps the government would take and the regulator declined to comment.
Australia’s groundbreaking experiment is being closely watched with countries around the world seeking to emulate it ​amid concern about youth mental and physical health. Britain, for example, this month announced planned restrictions that ​go further as gaming and live-streaming platforms will also be affected.

A girl uses her mobile phone in Sydney, Australia, November 22, 2025. REUTERS/Hollie Adams Purchase Licensing Rights

The eSafety Commission and Communications Minister Anika Wells have said ‌they ⁠are preparing legal action against multiple platforms, which face a maximum fine of A$49.5 million ($34 million) if they are found to have systemically failed to uphold the ban.
Reddit (RDDT.N), has launched a High Court challenge of the ban, which is still in preliminary hearings. Reddit was not immediately available for comment on Friday.
When Australia’s ​ban went live last December, ​there were early reports that ⁠it had shut down millions of accounts, but parents have said and studies have shown that teen social media use is little changed.

Source : https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/australia-considers-tougher-enforcement-social-media-ban-teens-2026-06-26/

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