As of December 10th, Australia introduced it’s social media ban on certain websites for children under 16. I do not have accounts with any of the affected platforms and I had assumed that this effectively requires everyone who uses them to prove their identity going forward. So far at least, I have no noticed any change at all. The websites affected as of writing are:
Facebook
Instagram
Kick
Reddit
Snapchat
Threads
TikTok
Twitch
X (formerly Twitter)
YouTube
With many of these such as Reddit, YouTube and Kick, you can still access them and see much of the content but under-16s are restricted from creating accounts and account features such as commenting, private messaging etc. With many of the others, they would now not be able to access the platform at all. As for people over 16 with existing accounts who get caught up in the restriction: they will have to confirm their age. For Facebook, the instructions are:
Users aged 16 and older who mistakenly receive a notification or lose access to their accounts have the option to confirm their age through Meta’s third-party partner, Yoti, by providing a video selfie or government-issued ID. Yoti deletes this information once the age check is complete.
By “have the option to confirm their age”, it means they have to do this or will not have access to their account whether they are 17 of 50 year old. I am sure with Facebook at least, that it is not much of a problem. I haven’t used Facebook for almost a decade but given I was an early adopter and am now in my forties, they may as well be banning under 16s from MySpace. Others on the list like TikTok and Instagram will hurt a lot more.
Like many, I have no doubt that this ultimately is a trojan horse for forcing digital ID as Western governments continue to chip away at basic civil liberties. It certainly isn’t to protect children as I will quickly demonstrate with the platforms that have been exempted from the ban below. Though I certainly believe all of this, I don’t in principle have a problem with doing more to protect children online.
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