Australia's teen social media ban stumbles as platforms skip age checks

midian182

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Facepalm: Australia's first-of-its-kind ban on under-16s using social media has run into another unforeseen problem: shockingly, teenagers know how birthdays work. A new study by software testing firm KJR found that major platforms are still allowing users to create accounts without asking for proof of age, even after the law came into force.

Since December 2025, services such as Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, X, and others have been required to take "reasonable steps" to stop Australians under 16 from holding accounts.

The government has backed a system of age checks rather than forcing everyone to upload government ID, partly because of the obvious privacy concerns. Platforms are supposed to look for signs that someone might be underage and escalate to stronger checks.

KJR, which helped run the government's earlier age-assurance trial, created 50 test accounts after the ban began, all declaring the user was 16. None were asked to prove it. All remained active across nine of the 10 platforms covered by the rules.

The finding points to a flaw that has attracted less attention than the accuracy of photo-based age-assurance software. The first stage of the process is supposed to infer a user's likely age range from their broader online activity, then send suspected underage users for stronger checks. KJR says that does not appear to be happening. "You should be asked to demonstrate how old you are, and not once have we been asked to verify our age or use age-assurance measures," Andrew Hammond, the firm's director, told Reuters.

The study found that platforms generally blocked accounts that openly admitted to being under 16, but did little when the user simply claimed to be old enough. Kick, the Australia-based streaming platform, was reportedly the only service that demanded proof of age at sign-up.

The findings echo another study from April. Research from the Molly Rose Foundation found that 61% of Australian 12- to 15-year-olds who had accounts on restricted platforms before the ban still had access to at least one of them.

That report also found that most kids had not needed workarounds, because platforms often failed to identify and remove them.

It also follows a University of Newcastle study of 408 adolescents, published in the BMJ, which found that more than 85% of under-16s were still using restricted social media three months after the ban took effect. Many were still using their own accounts, while others used fake accounts, false ages, selfies, or VPNs.

Australia is trying to respond to these failings by moving to toughen enforcement. It was reported last month that proposed reforms would double maximum penalties from AU$49.5 million to AU$99 million and give the eSafety Commissioner stronger powers to demand documents from platforms and age-assurance providers.

The UK has confirmed its own under-16 social media ban for spring 2027, but Australia's experience suggests passing the law is the easy part. Enforcing it is another matter altogether.

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The study found that platforms generally blocked accounts that openly admitted to being under 16, but did little when the user simply claimed to be old enough....
Another 'study' by academics who believe government can repeal the law of gravity or force water to not be wet simply by mandating it. What do they suggest these platforms do?I've seen 25-year olds that looked 15, and 15-year olds that appeared 25. Short of a mandated government ID (which the Australian parliament itself rejected) or sending paid investigator to home addresses, there really is no good solution.
 
Whilst there are issues, studies show that younger kids are much less likely to ever start using Facebook/Insta etc since the ban. Those who were already using it then had it taken away are finding ways to get around the auth checks. It's still a good thing in the end. Anything which restricts kids access to the AI slop and general misinformation cesspit that is Facebook and Instagram is good news.
 
Whilst there are issues, studies show that younger kids are much less likely to ever start using Facebook/Insta etc since the ban. Those who were already using it then had it taken away are finding ways to get around the auth checks. It's still a good thing in the end. Anything which restricts kids access to the AI slop and general misinformation cesspit that is Facebook and Instagram is good news.
Are the younger kids skipping social media entirely, or just skipping more mainstream stuff like Facebook? I mean, maybe all the younger ones are checking out 4chan instead. Or spending all their internet time socializing with weirdos on Roblox. ( Edit - apparently Roblox is doing the age check stuff in Australia, but has it reduced children using it there?)
 
Has anyone studied how many adults stopped using these platforms the first time they faced an age check? I know I would, and I’m sure thats exactly what these platforms fear…
 
Are the younger kids skipping social media entirely, or just skipping more mainstream stuff like Facebook? I mean, maybe all the younger ones are checking out 4chan instead. Or spending all their internet time socializing with weirdos on Roblox. ( Edit - apparently Roblox is doing the age check stuff in Australia, but has it reduced children using it there?)
Nobody but old Millennials use 4chan anymore.

Roblox, minecraft servers, discord servers, instagram reels, tiktocs, comment sections of videos, that is where the kids are heading.
 
It seems like a no coincidence that Western countries began to limit access to social platforms for kids when ideas and opinions that do not align with the popular liberal values began to grow.
Entire Western world shares similar issues which some elites try very hard to present
as features and positives. The usual slogans such as "diversity is our strength"
appeal to fewer and fewer people. And the very platforms that were the best friends of
the governments became the tools for spreading new ideas from people who were banned
from traditional news outlets. It makes a lot of sense to cut the access to these new and
"very dangerous" opinions which are strangely logical and reflective of reality.
Propaganda can do a lot, but when it has nothing with the reality, it becomes less and
less effective.
I agree that social platforms are doing a lot of harms to kids in big dozes, the main being that they
do not learn to socialize in real life and grow up without very valuable skills.
But being a bit pessimistic in general, I find it really hard to accept "we care of the kids"
at the time when I see how hard progressives fight growing voices that call to fix the problems that for
a long time were presented as blessings. "If kids can grow up without learning the reality, maybe they will keep siding with our values." They will not for as long as they can listen to the people that can in very concise and clear way to describe what is wrong the values that no longer help the nation grow, but are doing the opposite.

I think there will be a new "safe" social platform for kids, the platform that lacks anything that kids cannot know. Something like Bluesky but purer. It will not work.
A rational human being can ask simple questions such as, why is this good, or why is that bad. No amount of lies can break the reality. It is stupid because every regime did this and every time it went down the same way with propaganda becoming less and less effective. Western progressive propaganda is at that stage where one has to close his eyes to believe what he is being told.
And when aware parents take their kids from public schools because they do not want them to be taught what they are being taught, it speaks a lot about the system and what kind of protection it wants for children.
 
Lol... Remote "age check" is always going to be a PITA, especially in today's "AI" and Deepfake world.

Not much different than the "state your date of birth" nonsense before entering a "restrictive" website.

Jokers.....
 
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