Australia proposes legal minimum age for children accessing social media

10 September 2024, 10:34

Social media apps on a smartphone
Online Safety Bill. Picture: PA

PM Anthony Albanese said the government will trial age verification technology with a view to banning children from opening social media accounts.

The Australian government has promised to legislate this year to enforce a minimum age for children to access social media, but it has yet to announce how ages will be verified.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said the government will soon trial age verification technology with a view to banning children from opening social media accounts.

The line will be drawn between the ages of 14 and 16.

Australia Social Media
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has promised to legislate this year to enforce a minimum age for children to access social media (Mick Tsikas/AAP Image/AP)

Several countries and US states are attempting to legislate to protect children from online harms, including bullying.

The Australian move comes as parents increasing call for their children to be protected online and with the opposition party promising a social media ban for children under 16 if it wins elections due by May next year.

Mr Albanese told the Australian Broadcasting Corp: “We’ve committed to introducing legislation before the end of this year for age verification to make sure that we get young people away from this social harm.

“This is a scourge. We know that there is mental health consequences for what many of the young people have had to deal with – the bullying that can occur online, the access to material which causes social harm – and parents are wanting a response.”

Lisa Given, an information technology expert at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, said the government’s plan will prevent children accessing useful content as well.

“This is actually a very problematic move,” she said.

“This is a very blunt instrument that’s going to potentially exclude children from some very, very helpful supports on social media.”

South Australia state has recently proposed a law which would fine social media companies that do not exclude children under the age of 14 from their platforms.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

At least two people including a toddler have died and 68 more have been injured after a car ploughed into a crowd at a Christmas market in Germany.

Number of deaths could continue to rise, official warns, after car ploughs into crowd at Christmas market killing two

APTOPIX Congress Budget

US Senate passes government funding bill to avoid shutdown

Emergency services at the Christmas market in Magdeburg

At least two people dead after car driven into crowd at German Christmas market

People play in the water at Ulee Lheue beach which was one of the areas hardest hit by Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004, in Banda Aceh

Indonesians mark two decades since Boxing Day tsunami

Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Mike Johnson

US Congress passes bill to avoid government shutdown

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson

House approves funding bill and sends to Senate hours before shutdown deadline

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson

House speaker says Republicans have agreed on a new spending deal

People hold a photo of history teacher Samuel Paty

French court convicts eight people of involvement in 2020 beheading of teacher

Greece's former royal family

Greece’s former royal family seeks to reclaim citizenship

Italy’s Vice Premier Matteo Salvini surrounded by photographers

Italian court clears vice premier of illegally detaining migrants on rescue ship

Donald Trump

Trump adds Europe to list of US trade partners he is threatening with tariffs

At least two people including a toddler have died and 68 more have been injured after a car ploughed into a crowd at a Christmas market in Germany.

At least two dead including child and almost 70 injured after car ploughs into crowd at German Christmas market

Mayotte Cyclone Chido

Macron met with anger over Cyclone Chido response during visit to Mayotte

Pentagon Press Secretary Major General Pat Ryder

Pentagon warns US government shutdown will cost troops their pay over Christmas

An illustration depicting a person carving an osteoderm from a giant sloth

Giant sloths and mastodons lived with humans for millennia, research suggests

Donald Trump with US flags backdrop

Donald Trump transfers £3 billion of Trump Media shares to trust