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To ensure the success of Australia's social media ban, platforms that fail to comply must face serious consequences. Companies such as Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube have the means to observe these rules, yet the eSafety Commissioner has reasonable suspicion they are not. If so, the regulator will hold them to account.
The eSafety Commissioner's latest reports suggest that Australia's teen social media ban looks tougher on paper than in practice, with platforms seemingly violating the restrictions at will and children still accessing accounts. This massive enforcement gap risks undermining the whole initiative, especially when reports suggest that no fines are imminent.
Australia's teen social media ban sets a dangerous precedent — enforcing it requires building mass surveillance infrastructure that should alarm everyone. Every user must prove their identity to speak online, putting anonymous speech at risk for whistleblowers and vulnerable people alike. Worse, it strips away the parental controls and youth-safe account settings that actually protect minors, pushing kids toward unmoderated corners of the internet where adults can't follow.