logo
Australia adds YouTube to social media ban for children under age 16

Australia adds YouTube to social media ban for children under age 16

Euronews3 days ago
Australian teenagers under age 16 will be barred from making YouTube accounts, in an expansion of the country's world-first ban on social media for young people.
The decision comes after the country's internet regulator asked the government to include YouTube in its ban on social media for under-16s last month. A previous decision had allowed YouTube to sidestep the policy, which will go into effect later this year.
'We know that social media is doing social harm,' Anthony Albanese, Australia's centre-left prime minister, said during a press conference.
'My government and this parliament are ready to take action to protect young Australians'.
The ban for under-16s also includes social media platforms like Snapchat, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram, and X.
Many Australians appear on board with some age restrictions. In a survey of nearly 4,000 Australians published last month, around nine out of ten respondents said they want some type of 'age assurance' on social media.
YouTube is 'not social media,' company says
About three in four 10- to 15-year-olds in Australia have used YouTube, making it more popular than other major platforms such as TikTok and Instagram, according to a survey from the office of eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant.
Last month, Inman Grant recommended that YouTube be included in the social media ban due to evidence that children experience harmful content on the platform.
In the survey, 37 per cent of children who had seen any harmful content online said they saw it on YouTube.
'Given the known risk of harms on YouTube … and without sufficient evidence demonstrating that YouTube predominately provides beneficial experiences for children under 16, providing a specific carve out for YouTube appears to be inconsistent with the purpose of the Act,' Inman Grant's June recommendations read.
Under the new rules, children under 16 will still be able to access YouTube, but they will not be able to make accounts.
In a statement, YouTube said it shares the government's goal of 'addressing and reducing online harms,' but that it should not be included in the ban because of the service it provides.
'Our position remains clear: YouTube is a video sharing platform with a library of free, high-quality content,' the company said. 'It's not social media'.
Australia had previously excluded YouTube from the social media ban because it is a service that '[is] primarily for the purposes of education and health support,' the government said in a press release from last year.
YouTube said it is 'considering next steps' while continuing to work with the government. Australian media reported that this could include a court challenge.
The ban officially comes into place on December 10.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Image of woman protesting outside Trump-Starmer meeting is fake
Image of woman protesting outside Trump-Starmer meeting is fake

AFP

time4 hours ago

  • AFP

Image of woman protesting outside Trump-Starmer meeting is fake

"Best Monday in Scotland evah. This lady is wicked awesome," says a July 28, 2025 post on Threads. The clip showing Trump, with Starmer beside him, speaking about his Truth Social platform from inside his Turnberry resort on Scotland's southwestern coast as a woman stands outside the window carrying a sign that reads: "Trump is a cunt." Show Hide Content warning Show Image Screenshot from Threads taken July 31, 2025 Hide Similar posts shared the video or still images from it across Threads and other platforms such as Instagram and X, with some users branding the woman a hero and others wondering how she managed to evade the US Secret Service. Progressive commentator Kyle Kulinski, whose YouTube channel "Secular Talk" has 1.9 million subscribers, was among those who amplified the clip on X. Trump's press conference with Starmer came toward the end of a five-day tour of Scotland spent playing golf, opening a new course and signing a major trade deal with the European Union. The president's visit drew some protests, with several hundred people demonstrating outside the US consulate in the capital Edinburgh and further north in the city of Aberdeen, near where he inaugurated his new golf course in Balmedie. But the video spreading online is altered. The original footage of the sit-down, as carried live by Fox News, shows no such protester outside as Trump mentions Truth Social -- or at any other point during the press conference. from the event further confirm the woman depicted in the online posts was not truly there. Image Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer (L) speaks with US President Donald Trump during a bilateral meeting in Turnberry, Scotland on July 28, 2025 (POOL / Christopher Furlong) The protester edited into the background of the altered video is the late Scottish comedian Janey Godley, who famously stood outside Trump's Turnberry course with the anti-Trump sign in June 2016. Godley, who died in 2024 ived here), had posted the original picture of her stunt to social media, a blog on Medium and her personal website (archived here, here and here). She also shared other photos, a clip showcasing the poster and a YouTube video recapping the incident (archived here, here and here). Show Hide Content warning Show Image Screenshot from X taken August 1, 2025 Hide She went on to protest other Trump visits in similar fashion. During his 2025 trip, a protester in Edinburgh held a sign saying, "Janey Godley was right." AFP previously debunked other misinformation about Trump's time in Scotland here.

‘Moronic': White House responds to backlash over Sydney Sweeney ads
‘Moronic': White House responds to backlash over Sydney Sweeney ads

Euronews

time11 hours ago

  • Euronews

‘Moronic': White House responds to backlash over Sydney Sweeney ads

It's the controversy that just won't go away, and now the White House is weighing in on the American Eagle jeans advertisement featuring actress Sydney Sweeney. Steven Cheung, longtime adviser for Donald Trump and the White House communications director, wrote on X: 'Cancel culture run amok. This warped, moronic and dense liberal thinking is a big reason why Americans voted the way they did in 2024. They're tired of this bullshit.' For context, the tagline of the ad campaign is 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans' and plays on the homonym 'jeans' and 'genes'. One of the clips centres on Sweeney saying: 'Genes are passed down from parents to offspring, often determining traits like hair colour, personality, and even eye colour. My jeans are blue.' This has led many to take issue with the ad, accusing American Eagle of promoting 'white supremacy' and eugenics, with some calling the campaign a 'Nazi' dogwhistle. Check out our explainer on the Sydney Sweeney controversy. Since the ads were released last month, the pushback has been growing in intensity – with some reactions going viral online. The clips have split opinions, with many arguing that in the current political climate, the racial undertones of the campaign are a bad look. One TikTok post by @thealtperspective has been viewed nearly 2 million times and has the text overla:y "literally an ad FULL of racist and fascist dog whistles. 'great jeans,' a pun on great genes, those genes being blue eyed, blonde hair, white skin." However, the American Right has used the controversy to blast the liberal Left and to push back against perceived 'wokeness.' For instance, conservative TV personality Megyn Kelly has also called out the 'lunatics on the Left' for their take-down of the ad. 'She's being called a white supremacist by people who don't like her latest ad, which is for American Eagle,' she said. 'She's advertising jeans, and yet the lunatics on the Left think she's advertising white supremacy. This is obviously a reference to her body and not to her skin colour, but the lunatic left is going to do what the lunatic left is going to do.' Kelly added: 'They're upset because it's about who gets to be the face of America's Best Genes. They think it's no accident that they've chosen a white, thin woman because you're, I guess, not allowed to celebrate those things in any way, shape, or form. But they're completely ignoring the reference to her body, which is the thing she's famous for. It's just absurd.' As expected, the recent post on X by the White House's communications director has only added fuel to the fire. Check out some of the reactions below: Despite the controversy generated by the ads, the clips have been going viral – with the most 'popular' ad garnering more than 80 million views as of 31 July. The ads have also boosted American Eagle's stock by more than 15 per cent. This isn't the first time that Sydney Sweeney has been surrounded by controversy. The Euphoria and White Lotus actress faced criticism earlier this year for the sale of a Dr. Squatch bar of soap that contains her actual bathwater. Many labelled this as being antifeminist. Additionally, in 2022, she was slammed by fans after photos showed guests wearing MAGA-like hats at a 60th birthday party for her mother. Sweeney addressed this in a statement, saying: 'An innocent celebration for my moms milestone 60th birthday has turned into an absurd political statement, which was not the intention. Please stop making assumptions.' Still, the internet was far from convinced... Neither Sweeney nor American Eagle has publicly responded to the controversy as of the publication of this article.

Edited video features fabricated audio of Trump 'criticising corrupt Philippine officials'
Edited video features fabricated audio of Trump 'criticising corrupt Philippine officials'

AFP

time14 hours ago

  • AFP

Edited video features fabricated audio of Trump 'criticising corrupt Philippine officials'

The video was shared on Facebook on July 15, where it was viewed 219,000 times. It features Trump speaking into a microphone with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio standing behind him. The US President appears to be saying: "Beautiful people of the Philippines, your country is being robbed by corrupt politicians. They steal your money, betray your trust and sell out your future." The audio continues over footage of an incorrect Philippines' flag -- its red and blue fields have been inverted -- and various nature scenes, with Trump apparently urging Filipinos to "demand justice and take back your nation". The caption reads: "Philippines robbed by corrupt politicians. - Trump." Image Screenshot of the false post taken on July 29, 2025, with the red X mark added by AFP The same video circulated elsewhere on Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and TikTok Many users appeared to believe the circulating video of Trump was genuine. "Are we not ashamed by what he said?" said one user in Tagalog. "Our politicians are so embarrassing. They chose to be mum about what Trump just said about them," another user said. Though Transparency International, an organisation that monitors corruption worldwide, ranked the Philippines 114 out of 180 countries on its Corruption Perception Index, Trump did not give a speech accusing Filipino officials of being corrupt (archived link). Keyword searches on Google did not find any official reports of Trump making such comments (archived link). Reverse image searches on Google using keyframes from the video found it corresponds to Trump's speech on June 22 announcing US strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, published by AFP on YouTube (archived link). The description states Trump announced the attacks after its ally Israel launched an unprecedented bombing campaign on Iran on June 13. The altered clip has been mirrored but Rubio's head movements and Trump's expressions match the AFP video's 44-second mark. Trump in fact says: "Our objective was the destruction of Iran's nuclear enrichment capacity and a stop to the nuclear threat posed by the world's number one state sponsor of terror." Image Screenshot comparison of the false video (left) and the AFP video of Trump's speech (right) The circulating clip also bears signs of manipulation, such as the audio not matching with Trump's mouth movements.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store