
Australia's internet watchdog is investigating five major social media platforms for allegedly not complying with a world-first social media ban for under 16s, the government in Canberra said on Tuesday.
Under the new law, which took effect in December, under 16s are no longer allowed to have their own accounts on 10 major social media platforms.
Communications Minister Anika Wells said that the eSafety Commissioner was "actively investigating potential non-compliance in relation to five platforms: Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube."
Wells said that a "concerning" number of children under 16 was still accessing social media despite the ban.
The minister said that the first report on the ban by the eSafety Commissioner exposed "unacceptable systems" being used by tech giants, including allowing users to repeatedly attempt to pass age verification checks.
"The kinds of tactics we're seeing deployed by social media platforms to undermine Australia's world-leading law are right out of the big tech playbook," said Wells in a statement.
"This new report from eSafety Commissioner shows that social media giants seem to be trying to get away with doing the bare minimum – I have serious concerns about their compliance with the law," the minister continued.
"If eSafety finds these platforms have systemically failed to uphold their legal obligations, I expect the Commissioner to throw the book at them."
Wells said that, as of early March, 5 million under-16 social media accounts have been removed, deactivated or restricted.
Tech giants could be fined up to $49.5 million Australian ($33.9 million US) if they do not comply.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Bullets in Luigi Mangione’s bag convinced police that he was UnitedHealthcare CEO killing suspect - 2
The gay hockey show no one saw coming — and everyone is suddenly obsessed with - 3
Bond Girl Ursula Andress’ $23 Million Fortune Once ‘Fraudulently Misappropriated’ Was Allegedly Found - 4
Judge sets $60K bond for Florida congresswoman accused of stealing $5M in COVID-19 funds - 5
Merz says army could be involved in mine-clearing from Hormuz
Doctor's orders? ‘Belly laugh at least two to five days a week'
The ‘Stranger Things’ finale, explained: What happens to Vecna? And why was a key character’s fate left unknown?
Full Supreme Court to hear challenge to Judicial Selection Committee law
REWE launches seventh Pick&Go test store in Hanover
Family-Accommodating Snow Sports Experiences
When fake data is a good thing – how synthetic data trains AI to solve real problems
German petrol stations hike prices as once-a-day rule takes effect
Surging measles cases are 'fire alarm' warning that other diseases could be next
New ‘Cloud-9’ object could reveal the secrets of dark matter













