Australia Banning Kids from Social Media Does More Harm Than Good

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Age verification systems are surveillance systems that threaten everyone’s privacy and anonymity. But Australia’s government recently decided to ignore these dangers, passing a vague, sweeping piece of age verification legislation after giving only a day for comments. The Online Safety Amendment (Social Media Minimum Age) Act 2024, which bans children under the age of 16 from using social media, will force platforms to take undefined “reasonable steps” to verify users’ ages and prevent young people from using them, or face over $30 million in fines. 

The country’s Prime Minister, Anthony Albanese, claims that the legislation is needed to protect young people in the country from the supposed harmful effects of social media, despite no study showing such an impact. This legislation will be a net loss for both young people and adults who rely on the internet to find community and themselves.

The law does not specify which social media platforms will be banned. Instead, this decision is left to Australia’s communications minister who will work alongside the country’s internet regulator, the eSafety Commissioner, to enforce the rules. This gives government officials dangerous power to target services they do not like, all at a cost to both minor and adult internet users.

The legislation also does not specify what type of age verification technology will be necessary to implement the restrictions but prohibits using only government IDs for this purpose. This is a flawed attempt to protect privacy.

Since platforms will have to provide other means to verify their users’ ages othe

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