Play
Stop
 
 

The Albanese Government has reversed it’s decision to exempt YouTube from the national social media ban.

Initially, YouTube was not included in the original ban, however the inclusion of the platform comes after pressure from the eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant. Recent research showed that 37% of young people have seen harmful content on YouTube, the largest number of all platforms included in the bill. 

YouTube has criticized the new change, claiming their platform is not a social media, but a video sharing platform.

Specifically, children and teens under 16 will not be able to post content or create YouTube accounts. They will still be able to watch videos when logged out.

Other major platforms that fall under the ban are Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, and X. 

Since the bill’s announcement last year, many experts have expressed concern of the enforceability over the bill, and how the government is going to educate young people to improve digital literacy.

The ban is set to come into effect in December.

 

(Visited 52 times, 1 visits today)
Download Audio

The Wire is produced in partnership by

Contributor Stations

Supporters and Program Distribution