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Is Australia Really Banning YouTube for Kids Under 16? Here’s the Full Story

Australia has officially decided to include YouTube in its upcoming social media ban for children under 16, reversing an earlier commitment to treat the platform as an educational tool. The new law, coming into effect in December 2025, will also apply to Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, and X (formerly Twitter). The law puts the responsibility on social media companies to block under-16 accounts, or face hefty fines of up to 50 million Australian dollars ($32 million).

Why the Sudden Change?

The Role of Harmful Content

The decision was heavily influenced by a survey from Australia’s eSafety Commission which revealed that 37% of children reported seeing harmful content on YouTube. This content often included,

  • Sexist, misogynistic, or hateful ideas
  • Dangerous online challenges and fight videos
  • Content encouraging unhealthy eating or exercise habits

Minister’s Justification

Communications Minister Anika Wells defended the move with a striking analogy. She compared allowing children on unrestricted social media to teaching kids to swim in the open ocean with sharks, rather than in a safe local pool.

“We can’t control the ocean, but we can police the sharks,” Wells said, stressing that she wouldn’t be intimidated by legal threats from tech giants.

How Will the Ban Work?

The “World-Leading” Law

  • The Labor government had already passed this legislation last year, giving a 12-month buffer to finalize rules and test enforcement technologies.
  • Age Verification Trials: Tests conducted earlier in 2025 showed that age verification can be done in a “private, robust and effective” way.
  • No Perfect Solution: However, the report admitted there’s no single foolproof system to verify age across all platforms.
  • Privacy Concerns: Critics worry that new tools could lead to privacy breaches, as some platforms might collect more personal data than necessary.

Industry Pushback

YouTube’s Response

Decision “reverses a clear, public commitment” from the government to treat YouTube as an educational platform. While YouTube Kids remains exempt (as it doesn’t allow uploads or comments), the main platform will now fall under the ban.

Interestingly, YouTube even enlisted the Wiggles, Australia’s beloved children’s entertainers, to argue against the ban — but the government wasn’t convinced.

Tech Companies’ Countermeasures

  • YouTube Trials in the U.S.: The company is testing AI tools to detect if a user is under 18, using signals like video categories and account activity.
  • Policy Changes: For flagged accounts, YouTube will remove personalized ads, enable well-being tools, and limit repetitive viewing of certain content.
  • TikTok’s Campaign: TikTok launched ads in Australia highlighting how teens use the app for learning skills like cooking and fishing, trying to portray itself as more than just entertainment.

The Bigger Debate

Concerns from Parents and Experts

While the government believes this step is crucial for children’s online safety, critics argue it could,

  • Limit access for vulnerable or isolated children who rely on online communities.
  • Push teens toward loopholes, as Wells herself admitted:
  • “Kids, God bless them, are going to find a way around this. Maybe they’re all going to swarm on LinkedIn. We don’t know.”
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