Reddit claims Australia's social media ban violates constitution, eyes prolonged legal fight

In a detailed High Court filing, Reddit argues Australia's under-16 social media ban infringes constitutional rights to free political discourse and misclassifies the platform, following its initial compliance and subsequent challenge announcement. The government likens the suit to Big Tobacco resistance, as Reddit leverages its resources in its fourth-largest market.

Building on its High Court challenge announced last week—after briefly implementing age verification to comply with the December 10 ban—Reddit escalated its case on December 12, per Reuters. The lawsuit contends the law, the world's first such restriction targeting ten platforms with fines up to A$49.5 million ($33 million), limits free political expression. Reddit notes: "Australian citizens under the age of 16 will, within years if not months, become electors. The choices to be made by those citizens will be informed by political communication in which they engage prior to the age of 18."

The platform also argues it does not meet the law's definition of social media and raises privacy issues with required age verification like selfies or activity inference.

Health Minister Mark Butler dismissed the action as profit-motivated: "It is action we saw time and time again by Big Tobacco against tobacco control and we are seeing it now by some social media or big tech giants."

With a $44 billion market cap and Australia as its fourth-largest market (behind Canada, UK, US), Reddit is positioned for a drawn-out battle over youth protections and online access.

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Illustration depicting a lively debate in Bad Segeberg on proposed social media ban for under-16s, featuring protesting youth, discussing parents, and supportive politician.
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Debate on social media ban under 16 in Bad Segeberg

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In Bad Segeberg, the proposed ban on social media for children and youth under 16 is under intense discussion. Young people and parents express differing opinions, while Schleswig-Holstein's Minister President Daniel Günther supports it. The question of feasibility remains central.

Indonesia plans to restrict social media access for children under 16, following Australia's lead. The new regulation targets major platforms and requires them to delete underage accounts. Implementation begins on March 28 with a phased approach.

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The UK's Information Commissioner's Office has fined Reddit £14.5 million ($19.6 million) for failing to adequately verify user ages, resulting in the unlawful processing of children's personal data. The penalty addresses lapses before and after Reddit's July 2025 implementation of age checks for adult content. Reddit plans to appeal, citing its commitment to user privacy.

TikTok began on Tuesday (17) making all accounts of users under 16 private, to comply with the ECA Digital. The change requires parental authorization for alterations and complements existing restrictions. The law takes effect today, but its decree was postponed.

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Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta, defended his company's social media platforms during testimony in a Los Angeles court this week. The trial stems from a 2023 lawsuit alleging Instagram addiction caused harm to a young user. Zuckerberg pushed back on claims of intentional addictiveness while discussing child safety measures.

X said it has appealed a €120 million ($140 million) fine imposed by the European Commission for breaches of transparency obligations under the EU’s Digital Services Act, in what could become a first major court test of the bloc’s new online-platform rulebook.

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As Linux distributions continue responding to age verification laws in regions like California and Brazil—following earlier plans from Ubuntu, Fedora, and others—Garuda Linux has stated it will not comply, citing hosting in Finland and Germany. Arch Linux remains silent with forum discussions deleted, while Arch Linux 32 has blocked Brazilian users due to new legislation.

 

 

 

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