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Foreign Policy Watch: India-Australia

Australia social media ban on users aged under-16 kicks in

Introduction

Australia has enacted a first-of-its-kind law mandating that major social media platforms verify user age and remove accounts of children below 16 unless parents explicitly consent. The reform marks a sharp departure from earlier tech-driven self-regulation and responds to rising concerns over children’s mental health, grooming risks, harmful content, and the pressure of constant screen exposure. The move has been positioned as a “template for the world,” with global relevance as regulators struggle to manage Big Tech.

Why in the news?

Australia has become the first country globally to impose a minimum age for social media access, marking a structural shift in how online safety is governed. The legislation is significant because social media firms were previously allowed to operate on self-declared age checks, often exploited by under-16 users. 

Australia’s Move Towards an Age-Restricted Internet Ecosystem

  1. Minimum age requirement: Platforms must block users under 16 unless parents consent.
  2. Verification mandate: Tech firms must take “reasonable steps” to verify age and remove under-age accounts.
  3. New regulatory law: The Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Act creates enforceable obligations.
  4. Scope of platforms: Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Snapchat, X, TikTok, Threads, Reddit covered.

What Makes the Age-16 Cut-Off Significant?

  1. Based on mental-health indicators: Government-commissioned survey found 74% of children saw or heard disturbing content; 53% experienced online bullying; 27% faced personal attacks.
  2. Escalating harm to minors: 38% reported exposure to harmful content; 16% received sexualised images; 25% faced coercion or harassment.
  3. Self-harm risk: 17% saw content encouraging suicide or self-harm.
  4. Increased vulnerability: Under-16 users are at greater risk of grooming, hate speech, compulsive scrolling and pressure for online perfection.

How Are Tech Companies Responding?

  1. Compliance with resistance: Firms say the rule may not improve safety unless implemented globally.
  2. Burden of verification: Companies argue age-verification tools are intrusive or inaccurate.
  3. Big Tech backlash: Meta has called it impractical; industry bodies say “it will not make kids safer.”
  4. Regulator’s stance: eSafety insists firms have long failed to prioritise child safety despite repeated warnings.

How Does This Compare With India’s Approach?

  1. Parental consent focus: India allows minors to access social media with guardian approval; no age-16 prohibition.
  2. Law under review: India’s DPDP Act originally proposed a strict age-limit but relaxed it in 2023.
  3. Tech-industry influence: India’s softer position partly reflects concerns of over-regulation and digital inclusion.
  4. Existing obligations: Platforms must ensure safety of users but without mandatory age verification.
  5. Contrast in regulatory philosophy: Australia mandates verification; India relies on parental oversight.

Why Is Australia Positioning Itself as a Global Template?

  1. First mover advantage: No other country has set a universal age-16 social media restriction.
  2. Evidence-backed regulation: Emphasis on child mental-health data, grooming cases, hate content rise.
  3. Model for Western democracies: May influence UK’s Online Safety Act and EU child-protection deliberations.
  4. Accountability push: Shifts burden onto platforms, not users or parents.

Arguments Supporting the Ban

  1. Protects Mental and Emotional Health
    1. Lower exposure to harmful content and compulsive usage.
    2. Reduces anxiety, body-image issues, and cyberbullying.
  2. Ensures Safer Social Environments
    1. Decreases risks of grooming, harassment, stalking.
    2. Strengthens mechanisms of child protection.
  3. Encourages Healthy Childhood Development
    1. Promotes in-person socialisation, sports, hobbies.
    2. Protects attention spans and reduces digital addiction.
  4. Enhances Parental Participation
    1. Builds shared responsibility between state and family.
    2. Forms a bridge for conversations on digital behaviour.
  5. Holds Big Tech Accountable
    1. Platforms must prioritise safety over profit algorithms.
    2. Shifts burden from minors to corporations.

Arguments Criticising the Ban 

  1. May Not Be Technically Feasible: 
    1. Age-verification technologies can be inaccurate or intrusive.
    2. Teens may bypass rules using VPNs, fake IDs, or loopholes.
  2. Restricts Freedom and Digital Expression
    1. Limits creativity, art-sharing, community-building.
    2. Curtails a teen’s right to express identity.
  3. Affects Social Inclusion: Digital communities are key social spaces; absence may create social disconnectedness.
  4. May Push Children to Unregulated Spaces
    1. Alternative apps, gaming communities, or private groups may become more dangerous.
    2. Harder for parents to monitor.

      5.Differential Impact Across Socio-economic Groups: Children with tech-savvy families bypass       easily; others comply strictly; this may lead to inequality in digital exposure.

Conclusion

Australia’s social media age-restriction law marks a decisive shift toward child-centric digital governance. By mandating age verification, compelling parental consent, and imposing significant penalties, it challenges Big Tech’s long-standing autonomy. Its global implications lie in redefining platform accountability and inspiring nations to re-examine their youth-safety frameworks. For India, the development provides an important reference point as it balances innovation with child protection in digital spaces.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2023] Child cuddling is now being replaced by mobile phones. Discuss its impact on the socialization of children.

This PYQ directly relates to how digital exposure alters children’s socialisation, a core concern behind Australia’s under-16 social media ban. It links the societal impact of early phone use with the need for stronger regulation to protect minors online.

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