Meta acts early to remove young users
Meta has started removing Australian children under 16 from Instagram, Facebook, and Threads. The company implements this step one week before the national youth ban takes effect. Last month, Meta informed users aged 13 to 15 that their accounts would close starting 4 December. Around 150,000 Facebook accounts and roughly 350,000 Instagram profiles are expected to be affected. Threads also restricts young users because it requires an Instagram login. Australia’s new law, starting 10 December, mandates that platforms block under-16s. Companies risk fines up to A$49.5m if they fail to act.
Meta calls for standardized age verification
A spokesperson told a British news outlet that compliance will remain complex and ongoing. She said Meta will follow the law but wants a more effective, privacy-focused approach. Meta recommends that app stores verify ages before downloads. Parents would approve access for under-16s, preventing repeated checks across apps. Meta also said teens flagged as under 16 can save posts, videos, and messages before account removal. Young users who believe the system misclassified them can request a review and submit a short video selfie. They may also provide a driver’s licence or another government-issued ID.
Wider impact across platforms
The ban also applies to YouTube, X, TikTok, Snapchat, Reddit, Kick, and Twitch. The government says the law protects children from online harm. Critics warn it may isolate teens who rely on social platforms for connection. They also fear young users could migrate to poorly regulated corners of the internet. Communications Minister Anika Wells said she expects early challenges but aims to protect Generation Alpha. She warned that powerful algorithms trap children in harmful content loops. She described children as connected to a constant “dopamine drip” once they join social media. Wells said she is monitoring apps like Lemon8 and Yope for youth migration after the ban.
Emerging platforms face scrutiny
Australia’s eSafety Commissioner asked Lemon8 and Yope to determine whether the ban applies to them. Yope’s chief executive said the company has not received direct inquiries but already completed an internal review. He said Yope functions as a private messenger with no public content, similar to WhatsApp. Users only share daily moments with trusted contacts. Reports indicate Lemon8 will block under-16s next week, even though it is not officially included in the ban. YouTube, initially exempt but later included, criticised the law as rushed. The platform argues that removing teen accounts with parental controls could reduce safety.
Global attention on Australia’s policy
Governments around the world are watching Australia’s approach closely. A national study found that 96% of children aged 10 to 15 use social media. Seven in ten reported exposure to harmful posts, including violent content or material linked to eating disorders and suicide. One in seven said they experienced grooming behaviour from adults or older children. More than half reported cyberbullying.
