Australia’s internet regulator has criticised the world’s largest social media companies of failing to properly enforce the country’s ban on under-16s using their platforms, despite laws that took effect in December. The eSafety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, has raised “serious concerns” about adherence by Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube, citing poor practices including allowing banned users to repeatedly attempt age verification and inadequate safeguards to prevent new accounts. In its first compliance report since the prohibition came into force, the regulator found numerous deficiencies and has now shifted from observation to active enforcement, warning that platforms must demonstrate they have implemented “appropriate systems and processes” to prevent children under 16 from accessing their services.
Non-compliance Issues Uncovered in Opening Large-scale Review
Australia’s eSafety Commissioner has outlined a troubling pattern of non-compliance among the world’s most prominent social media platforms in her inaugural review since the ban came into effect on 10 December. The report reveals that Meta, Snap, TikTok, YouTube and Snapchat have collectively failed to implement adequate safeguards to stop minors from accessing their services. Julie Inman Grant raised significant concerns about structural gaps in age verification systems, noting that some platforms have allowed children who initially declared themselves under 16 to subsequently claim they were older, effectively circumventing the law’s intent.
The findings represent a significant escalation in the regulatory response, with the eSafety Commissioner moving beyond monitoring to direct enforcement. The regulator has stressed that simply showing some children still hold accounts is inadequate; platforms must rather furnish substantive proof that they have established robust systems and processes intended to stop under-16s from creating accounts in the outset. This shift reflects the government’s commitment to ensure tech giants responsible, with possible sanctions looming for companies that fail to meet the statutory obligations.
- Permitting formerly prohibited users to re-verify their age and restore account access
- Enabling multiple tries at the same age assurance method without consequences
- Insufficient systems to prevent accounts for under-16s from being established
- Inadequate reporting tools for parents and members of the public
- Absence of publicly available information about compliance actions and account deletions
The Magnitude of the Issue
The considerable scale of social media activity amongst Australian young people highlights the compliance challenge confronting both the government and the platforms themselves. With millions of accounts already removed or restricted since the ban’s implementation, the figures provide evidence of extensive early non-compliance. The eSafety Commissioner’s findings indicate that the operational and technical barriers to implementing age restrictions have proven far more complex than expected, with platforms struggling to distinguish genuine age declarations from false claims. This complexity has placed enforcement authorities wrestling with the fundamental question of whether current age verification technologies are sufficient for the purpose.
Beyond the operational challenges lies a wider issue about the willingness of platforms to place compliance ahead of user growth. Social media companies have long resisted strict identity verification requirements, citing privacy concerns and the genuine difficulty of verifying age digitally. However, the regulatory report suggests that some platforms might not be demonstrating adequate commitment to deploy the infrastructure required by law. The shift towards active enforcement represents a critical juncture: either platforms will substantially upgrade their compliance infrastructure, or they stand to incur substantial fines that could reshape their business models in Australia and potentially influence compliance frameworks internationally.
What the Data Shows
In the first month subsequent to the ban’s introduction, Australian authorities reported that 4.7 million accounts had been restricted or deleted. Whilst this figure initially seemed to show enforcement effectiveness, further investigation reveals a more nuanced picture. The sheer volume of account takedowns suggests that many under-16s had managed to establish accounts in the beginning, indicating that preventive controls were lacking. Additionally, the data casts doubt about whether deleted profiles constitute genuine enforcement or just users closing their accounts of their own accord in reaction to the new restrictions.
The minimal transparency concerning these figures has troubled independent observers trying to determine the ban’s actual effectiveness. Platforms have provided scant details about their enforcement methodologies, success rates, or the nature of deleted profiles. This absence of transparency makes it difficult for regulators and the general public to assess whether the ban is functioning as designed or whether teenagers are just locating other methods to access social media. The Commissioner’s insistence on thorough documentation of structured adherence protocols reflects mounting dissatisfaction with platforms’ resistance to disclosing comprehensive data.
Sector Reaction and Opposition
The major tech platforms have responded to the regulator’s enforcement action with a combination of assurances of compliance and doubts regarding the ban’s practicality. Meta, which operates Facebook and Instagram, stressed its dedication to adhering to Australian law whilst at the same time contending that accurate age determination remains a significant industry-wide challenge. The company has advocated for a alternative strategy, suggesting that strong age verification systems and parental consent requirements implemented at the application store level would be more effective than enforcement at the platform level. This stance reflects broader industry concerns that the current regulatory framework places an unrealistic burden on separate platforms.
Snap, the developer of Snapchat, has taken a more proactive public stance, stating that it had suspended 450,000 accounts since the ban took effect and claiming to continue locking more daily. However, industry observers question whether such figures reflect authentic adherence or simply represent reactive account management. The core conflict between platforms’ commercial structures—which historically relied on maximising user engagement and growth—and the statutory obligation to actively exclude an entire age demographic remains unresolved. Companies have long resisted stringent age verification, pointing to privacy concerns and technical limitations, establishing an impasse between regulators and platforms over who bears responsibility for execution.
- Meta contends age verification ought to take place at app store level instead of on individual platforms
- Snap asserts to have locked 450,000 accounts since the ban’s implementation in December
- Industry groups point to privacy concerns and technical obstacles as impediments to effective age verification
- Platforms assert they are doing their best whilst challenging the ban’s overall effectiveness
Larger Questions About the Prohibition’s Efficacy
As Australia’s under-16 online platform ban enters its enforcement phase, fundamental questions remain about whether the law will accomplish its intended goals or merely drive young users towards unregulated platforms. The regulator’s initial compliance assessment reveals that following implementation, significant loopholes exist—children continue finding ways to circumvent age verification systems, and platforms have had difficulty stop new underage accounts from being established. Critics contend that the ban’s effectiveness depends not merely on regulatory vigilance but on whether young people will truly leave mainstream platforms or simply shift towards other platforms, encrypted messaging applications, or VPNs designed to mask their age and location.
The ban’s global implications contribute further complexity to assessments of its impact. Countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada, and several European nations are watching Australia’s experiment closely, exploring similar laws for their respective populations. If the ban proves ineffective at reducing children’s online activity or does not protect them from harmful content, it could damage the case for equivalent legislation elsewhere. Conversely, if regulation becomes sufficiently robust to truly restrict underage usage, it may encourage other nations to adopt comparable measures. The result will potentially determine international regulatory direction for the foreseeable future, making Australia’s implementation efforts scrutinised far beyond its borders.
Who Gains and Who Is Disadvantaged
Mental health supporters and organisations focused on child safety have endorsed the ban as a necessary intervention against algorithmic manipulation and contact with harmful content. Parents and educators maintain that removing young Australians platforms built to maximise engagement could reduce anxiety, enhance sleep quality, and decrease exposure to cyberbullying. Tech companies’ own research has acknowledged the mental health risks linked to social media use amongst adolescents, adding weight to these concerns. However, the ban also removes legitimate uses of social media for young people—maintaining friendships, accessing educational content, and participating in online communities around shared interests. The regulatory framework assumes harm outweighs benefit, a calculation that some young people and their families challenge.
The ban’s real-world effects goes further than individual users to influence content creators, small businesses, and community organisations dependent on social media platforms. Young people who might have pursued creative careers through platforms like TikTok or Instagram now face legal barriers to participation. Small Australian businesses that are dependent on social media marketing lose access to younger demographic audiences. Community groups, charities, and educational organisations have trouble connecting with young people through channels they previously utilised effectively. Meanwhile, the ban unexpectedly advantages large technology companies with resources to build age verification infrastructure, possibly reinforcing their market dominance rather than reducing it. These unexpected outcomes suggest the ban’s effects go well past the simple goal of child protection.
What Happens Next for Enforcement
Australia’s eSafety Commissioner has signalled a marked change from hands-off observation to active enforcement, marking a pivotal moment in the implementation of the under-16 ban. The regulator will now collect data to determine whether companies have neglected to implement “reasonable steps” to prevent underage access, a regulatory requirement that surpasses simply recording that children remain on these systems. This strategy demands demonstrable proof that platforms have introduced proper safeguards and procedures intended to prevent minors. The enforcement team has signalled it will conduct enquiries carefully, developing arguments that could result in considerable sanctions for failure to comply. This move from observation to intervention reflects mounting concern with the services’ existing measures and signals that voluntary cooperation on its own will not be enough.
The implementation stage highlights important questions about the sufficiency of sanctions and the operational systems for holding tech giants accountable. Australia’s legislation provides compliance mechanisms, but their efficacy hinges on the eSafety Commissioner’s readiness to undertake formal action and the platforms’ ability to adapt substantively. Overseas authorities, notably regulators in the United Kingdom and European Union, will carefully track Australia’s enforcement strategy and results. A successful enforcement campaign could set a blueprint for further jurisdictions contemplating equivalent prohibitions, whilst inadequate results might undermine the comprehensive regulatory system. The coming months will determine whether Australia’s groundbreaking legislation translates into real safeguards for adolescents or becomes largely performative in its impact.
