
We Can't Just Turn Off The Internet For Those Under 16
The New Zealand Council for Civil Liberties opposes this bill as unreasonable in principle and unworkable in practice and believes it should not be progressed if selected for introduction.
The NZ Council for Civil Liberties opposes the Social Media Age-Restricted Users Bill presented by National MP Catherine Wedd with support from Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, which would ban those under 16 from accessing social media.
The bill's definition of social media is incredibly broad and includes any platform where the primary purpose is to 'enable social interactions between 2 or more end-users'. This would include the obvious contenders such as Facebook, Snapchat, Twitter/X, YouTube, and Instagram, but also describes a large range of other sites such as Reddit, Discord, hobbyist forums, support groups, and arguably even email.
'The New Zealand Bill of Rights guarantees us the right to freedom of expression, the ability to seek, send and receive information, and this applies to people under the age of 16 too. They have the right to communicate with each other, their friends, and their family, and the modern reality is that they use social media to do so.' says Thomas Beagle.
'But they're doing more than that: we've seen youth-led political movements such as JustSpeak, School Strike 4 Climate and the Make It 16 campaigns all use social media to organise political campaigns. This bill is a gross imposition on their rights and a terrible discouragement to just the sort of politically active people our country needs.'
The bill puts the responsibility on the platforms to determine the age of their users, and we are concerned that this might lead to New Zealanders being forced to provide identity documents and other evidence to both local and foreign platform providers, who already know far too much about us and are happy to sell that information to others. However, the bill is very light on detail with the tricky specifics to be developed in regulation (making the whole regulatory process susceptible to lobbying and corruption).
The New Zealand Council for Civil Liberties opposes this bill as unreasonable in principle and unworkable in practice and believes it should not be progressed if selected for introduction.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NZ Herald
11 minutes ago
- NZ Herald
Listen to The Country: Prime Minister Christopher Luxon talks polls and popularity
Today on The Country radio show, host Jamie Mackay catches up with Prime Minister Christopher Luxon to talk about everything from the proposed Alliance Group deal, high-vis vests, Winston Peters, urgent economic action, and his gloomy poll results. On with the show: Christopher Luxon:

1News
27 minutes ago
- 1News
Greens' Chlöe Swarbrick has no plans to apologise for Gaza speech
Green Party co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick has no plans to apologise, after Speaker Gerry Brownlee ordered her from the House yesterday. During an urgent debate, Swarbrick said Government MPs could grow a spine and support her bill imposing sanctions on Israel. Brownlee suspended her from Parliament and said he would do so again every day this week, unless she apologised. This morning, a Green Party spokesperson confirmed Swarbrick was not planning on apologising. The morning's headlines in 90 seconds, including the legal fight to get a New Zealand woman and her child out of US immigration detention, sliding house prices, and Taylor Swift's big reveal. (Source: 1News) ADVERTISEMENT Speaking to media yesterday after the Speaker's ruling, Swarbrick said the party would follow the correct processes and would ask Brownlee to reflect on previous language in Parliament. She described the ruling as "ridiculous" and the punishment excessive. "As far as the robust debate goes in that place, I think that was pretty mild in the context of the war crimes that are currently unfolding." She drew a comparison with comments made by former prime minister Sir John Key in 2015, when he challenged the opposition to "get some guts". Swarbrick said she was tired and angry at the massacre of human beings. Swarbrick speaking to reporters after being removed from the house this afternoon. (Source: 1News) "What the hell is the point of everything that we do if the people in my place, in my job don't do their job?" she said. "If we allow other human beings to be just mercilessly slaughtered, to be shot while waiting for food aid, what hope is there for humanity?" ADVERTISEMENT Swarbrick was not the only MP to run afoul of the Speaker during yesterday's debate. Earlier, Labour MP Damien O'Connor was told to either exit the chamber or apologise after interjecting "bloody gutless" while Foreign Minister Winston Peters was speaking. O'Connor stood and left. Brownlee also demanded ACT MP Simon Court say sorry — which he did — after he accused Swarbrick of "hallucinating outrage". 'Deafening' silence on Gaza — Labour On RNZ Morning Report's political panel, National minister Paul Goldsmith said the Government was taking time to discuss Palestinian statehood. The Government is currently re-evaluating its position on the territory, while critics say it's taken too long already. (Source: 1News) ADVERTISEMENT Labour's deputy leader Carmel Sepuloni said there was no worse injustice than what was happening in Gaza and the silence from National was "deafening". "You saw the frustration explode in the House yesterday. There are a lot of New Zealanders out there watching the scenes in the Middle East and wondering where the voice of our Government is on this, and why its taking so long to make simple decisions." Goldsmith said the decisions weren't simple. The Government had always been clear it was in favour of a two-state solution, and was working its way through what it wanted to do, he said. The Green Party co-leader declined to apologise after calling on six Government MPs "with a spine" to vote on the Party's bill to sanction Israel. (Source: Supplied) "Australia made a decision on Monday, we don't have to do our decision on Tuesday," he said. Goldsmith said the Government was working on a clear position recognising a concern around Hamas and making sure that they were not involved in any future Palestinian state. Australia will move to recognise Palestine at UN meeting in September, and Foreign Minister Winston Peters has said New Zealand would make a decision over the next month.


NZ Herald
41 minutes ago
- NZ Herald
Changing of the guard in Washington as veteran diplomat comes home
Peters said the partnership with the US was 'one of our most important and long-standing relationships'. 'It is therefore essential that New Zealand's Ambassador has the necessary experience, judgement and influence to effectively represent our country in Washington DC and navigate the range of important and pressing issues that are vital to New Zealanders,' he said. Peters described Seed as 'one of NZ's most senior and accomplished diplomats and is accordingly the right person for this vial role'. Donald Trump with the New Zealand Ambassador to the US Rosemary Banks in the Oval Office during Trump's first term. Photo / File Banks was widely tipped to serve a shorter stint in Washington this time around. Banks first served in Washington between 2018 and 2022, having been sent there by Peters, who was then Foreign Minister in the Ardern Government. She had a reputation - even among other embassies - for building good contacts with a mercurial Trump administration. After two years at home, she was called up again for a second term in 2024 after her replacement, Bede Corry, was brought home to head up MFAT. With a second Trump Administration a distinct possibility in 2024, she was sent back to Washington DC for what was widely understood to be a shorter second stint. The process to find a new ambassador began some months ago. Peters paid tribute to Banks, saying she had served 'a most distinguished diplomatic career, having led NZ missions in Paris, New York and Washington'. 'Twice Ms Banks has been asked by her Government to serve in Washington DC and we are enormously grateful to her that twice she answered that call to serve with distinction as NZ Ambassador to the US. 'Ms Banks' long diplomatic experience and her elevated standing amongst her US counterparts, during such a challenging time in global affairs, has seen her contribute greatly to one of NZ's most critical bilateral relationships,' he said.