this post was submitted on 12 Dec 2025
25 points (100.0% liked)

World News

1031 readers
706 users here now

Rules:
Be a decent person, don't post hate.

Other Great Communities:

Rules

Be excellent to each other

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/47160775

Archived

[...]

A barrage of human rights groups and others, including Index on Censorship, Amnesty International and Save the Children, have all criticised or opposed the ban.

Tom Sulston, head of policy at Australian charity Digital Rights Watch, told Index that they were broadly supportive of the idea that internet access is a human right. While the new law only restricts teens from accessing 10 specific sites – X, TikTok, Instagram, Snapchat, Threads, Facebook, YouTube, Reddit, Kick and Twitch – he said that the space these social media companies represent is enormous.

“They do occupy this space as the town square of digital society,” Sulston said. “So, is it proportionate to remove that right of access to a group of people in order to protect their safety, or under the guise of protecting their safety? We don’t think so.”

[...]

There is now an interesting legal conversation to be had about the ban, Sulston said. On 26 November, two 15-year-olds launched a legal challenge to the law, supported by rights group the Digital Freedom Project (DFP), in Australia’s High Court. They are arguing that all Australians have a constitutional implied right to freedom of political communication.

“Young people like me are the voters of tomorrow,” said one plaintiff Macy Neyland in a statement. “Why on earth should we be banned from expressing our views?” Neyland added that the situation was “like Orwell’s book Nineteen Eighty-Four”.

Noah Jones, who is also suing the government, told the media: “We’re disappointed in a lazy government that blanket-bans under-16s rather than investing in programmes to help kids be safe on social media. They should protect kids with safeguards, not silence.”

A direction hearing for the teens’ court challenge will be heard in February at the earliest.

[...]

Digital Rights Watch’s Sulston said that he was also worried about autocracies eyeing up the law. According to digital rights non-profit Access Now, 2024 was the worst year on record for internet shutdowns.

“Young people are not represented democratically, even in democratic societies. If you’re under the age to vote, then you get nothing,” Sulston said. “So being able to organise and develop political understanding and take political action online is really important for that cohort. You can see why it would be very attractive for authoritarian regimes to clamp down on that.”

But Sulston said that even though he considered the law a “disaster” and there was no evidence that it would improve children’s lives, it had already been showcased at the UN General Assembly and “deemed a great success”.

He said: “It’s really hard to see what a path to change looks like, because no matter how harmful it is, it seems we’re stuck with it.”

top 5 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] Deceptichum@quokk.au 9 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I would 100% of killed myself as a teen if not for the Internet. I was able to find my people in the world outside of my shitty small minded small town.

If the government gave a shit about children’s safety they would be funding it. This is purely to get a foot in the door on Internet control. Few more years and it’ll be terrorism or something that means everybody needs to identify themselves online.

Yes but I betyou weren't one of the children we care about.

[–] Fecundpossum@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

“Noooooooooo you have to let the algorithm prey on children the moment they’re born or the algorithm won’t learn how to better prey on them once they’re of voting age”

Fuck social media. EVEN THIS social media is proving itself to be compromised.

This doesn't stop algoslop

[–] aislopmukbang@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 days ago

This is a tough one. I see both arguments. After all, this is a social media site born out of a tiredness of algorithms that monopolize your attention, and I would guess you also will not find many teens on it. Not sure what the right answer is.

Perhaps a ban is a good short-term measure while consensus forms on how to mitigate and enforce on risk exposure to children and teens?