On Sunday, Albanese dismissed Google’s legal threat to Wells, telling ABC Insiders the minister would make assessments independent of threats made by social media companies.
“I say to them that social media has a social responsibility. There is no doubt that young people are being impacted adversely in their mental health by some of the engagement with social media and that is why the government has acted,” he said.
The ban passed as law in November last year, requiring tech platforms to take reasonable steps to ensure children under 16 are not using their services. YouTube received an exemption at the time after former communications minister Michelle Rowland deemed it had significant educational purposes.
eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman-Grant delivered formal advice to Wells in June recommending YouTube be removed from the carveout because research showed four in 10 young teenagers had been exposed to harmful content, such as eating disorders, on the platform.
Wells has since accepted Inman-Grant’s advice, saying in a statement kids would be given a reprieve from the “persuasive and pervasive pull of social media”.
“We want kids to know who they are before platforms assume who they are,” she said.
But YouTube Kids, which offers a restricted version of the video service with clips that are appropriate for young users, is not caught by the ban because children cannot upload videos and it has other safety restrictions. That could provide a path for other platforms to create restricted versions of their services and get similar treatment.
Under the law, platforms will face fines of up to almost $50 million for failing to take reasonable steps to prevent underage account holders from using their services.
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