Experts weigh in on Australia's social media ban for under-16s amid legal challenges

As Australia's groundbreaking ban on social media for minors under 16 takes effect—sparking Reddit's High Court challenge—experts debate its mental health benefits versus risks of driving use underground. The law targets platforms like TikTok and Instagram to curb harmful content exposure.

Australia's nationwide ban on social media access for children under 16, effective earlier this week, has ignited both support and criticism. The legislation requires platforms to block underage accounts using age verification tech, with fines up to $33 million AUD for non-compliance. Reddit quickly challenged it in the High Court, citing intrusive verification for adults and limits on teen expression, while initially implementing checks.

The ban addresses rising youth mental health issues tied to intensive social media use. Studies link moderate use to better well-being, but each extra hour daily for 10-15-year-olds increases depression and anxiety risk by 13.5%. Vulnerable groups include introverted teens, those with low self-esteem, and girls facing beauty standards that can trigger eating disorders. Unsupervised exposure to violence, self-harm, and risky content amplifies harms.

Antonia Larraín, academic vice-rector at Universidad Alberto Hurtado, praises the ban as a vital push for platforms to create safer spaces, signaling societal priority on youth well-being despite enforcement challenges.

Critic Mauricio Bravo, vice-dean at Universidad del Desarrollo's Faculty of Education, calls it paternalistic and counterproductive, arguing it pushes kids to fake accounts or VPNs, increasing dangers like grooming. He urges digital literacy, parental guidance, and self-regulation education instead.

Other platforms like Meta and Snapchat are complying by removing underage accounts, while countries like Denmark and France watch closely.

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