YouTube will not be exempt from under-16 social media ban
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The Age
an hour ago
- The Age
Australia to take teen social media ban plan global, despite Wiggles' complaints
Australia will take its social media ban to New York to push world leaders to protect children online despite the Trump administration's defence of US tech companies and attacks on digital censorship. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese revealed on Wednesday he would hold an event in New York in September to coincide with a United Nations meeting, after the government defied threats from YouTube's parent company to sue if the site was included in the ban. Communications Minister Anika Wells confirmed the chief executive of children's music superstars The Wiggles, Kate Chiodo, was brought in to advocate against barring children under 16 from logging in to the platform. 'For clarity, it was the black skivvies, Wiggles Inc, Wiggles management, not individual members of our cherished national icon the Wiggles,' Wells said on Wednesday. The prime minister added: 'We're not here to sledge the Wiggles. Let's be very clear, my government is pro-Wiggle'. YouTube Kids will escape the social media ban, but the main platform will be included in the ban along with sites such as Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, X and Snapchat. The ban is set to start on December 10. The prime minister said advocacy groups that campaigned for the ban, including 36 Months and Let Them Be Kids, would be part of the event in New York in September. 'We will continue to advocate, this is our position, it is up to other nations what they do, but I know from the discussions I have had with other leaders, that they are looking at this,' he said. Albanese remained unfazed when asked about US President Donald Trump's close relationship with the tech giants, confirming the social media ban had not come up in conversations between him and the president.

Sky News AU
3 hours ago
- Sky News AU
'Big day for America': US President Donald Trump declares August 1 tariff deadline will not be extended after securing deals with Japan, EU
President Donald Trump has declared his August 1 deadline for the introduction of tariffs will not be extended after the United States secured fresh trade deals with Japan and the European Union. The President's threat of widespread tariffs first emerged in April when the US leader announced a long list of nations would be hit with levies to address perceived trade imbalances. Those measures were subsequently delayed, however, with President Trump ultimately pushing back their introduction until August 1 in order to strike "90 deals in 90 days". Despite the delay, the US is set to fall well short of that target, prompting speculation the President could again push back the deadline. On Wednesday, though, President Trump took to his Truth Social platform to dispel any doubts about when tariffs would come into force. "The August first deadline is the August first deadline - it stands strong, and will not be extended," he wrote. "A big day for America!!!" The declaration is likely to cause concern for a number of Australian businesses, with the Albanese government yet to negotiate a new deal with the Trump administration. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Trade Minister Don Farrell have both cited an existing free trade agreement, as well as Australia's longstanding trade deficit with the US, as reasons the nation should escape tariffs, although neither argument has appeared to resonate. President Trump had singled out Australian biosecurity restrictions on US beef, which the government loosened last week, as an example of unfair trade practices, while pharmaceutical companies are understood to have lobbied his administration over Australia's Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. If Australian officials are unsuccessful at allaying those concerns, and others, the nation appears set to face tariffs of at least 10 per cent - although President Trump flagged that number may rise as high as 20 per cent in future. The President's declaration comes on the heels of major new agreements struck with Indonesia, Japan and the EU. All three nations will still face tariffs as part of the deals, although at a lower level than originally threatened when President Trump first announced the measures. President Trump's moves to upend global trade have sparked chaos in world markets and prompted the International Monetary Fund to warn they could impact economic growth in the years ahead. In its July World Economic Outlook Update, the organisation's chief economist, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, warned: "The world economy is still hurting, and it's going to continue hurting with tariffs at that level, even though it's not as bad as it could have been". Mr Gourinchas added tariffs were beginning to impact the US economy, saying the IMF was seeing evidence consumer prices were beginning to edge higher.

Sky News AU
4 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Labor ‘steamrolling' Australian farmers with $12,000 renewable project fines
IPA Deputy Executive Director Daniel Wild discusses farmers protesting wild $12,000 fines for those who object to massive renewables projects on their land. 'This is a big issue, like you say, these farmers are getting steamrolled,' Mr Wild told Sky News host Paul Murray. 'The massive fine that they get, but also under this legislation, the government can appoint what it calls 'authorised officers' to enter the property of farmers without their consent, and they can't stop them from doing that. 'This goes against everything that it means to be an Australian.'