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Australia Expands Teen Social Media Ban to Include Reddit and Kick

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Date Published
4 Nov 2025
Priority Score
3
Australian
Yes
Created
6 Nov 2025, 10:57 am

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Description

More sites could still be added.

Summary

Australia's internet regulator has extended its groundbreaking teen social media ban to include Reddit and the live streaming platform Kick, with the possibility of additional platforms being added. This move is part of a broader strategy to protect underage users, with social media companies facing fines up to $49.5 million for non-compliance. By December 10, Australia will enforce these regulations, making it a global pioneer in social media governance aimed at safeguarding young users. The new law mandates technology firms to reassess their platforms' primary uses to comply with the age restrictions, ensuring dynamic regulation amidst rapidly evolving technology landscapes.

Body

Australia's internet watchdog has widened its world-first teen social media ban to include Reddit and video live streaming platform Kick, and said more sites could be added if their main role was to enable online social interaction. Australia will become the first country to fine social media firms up to $49.5 million if they fail to take reasonable steps to block users aged under 16. The law will become effective from December 10. The eSafety Commissioner urged tech firms to continually assess whether they meet the definition of an 'age-restricted social media platform' when they introduce newfeatures or their primary usage changes. Discord, GitHub, LEGO Play, Roblox, Steam and Steam Chat, Google Classroom, Messenger, Meta Platforms' WhatsApp and YouTube Kids do not currently meet the criteria for an age-restricted social media platform, the regulator said. Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Threads, TikTok, X, and Alphabet-owned YouTube have already been included in the list. There will not be a static list of companies that areage-restricted because of the fast-changing nature oftechnology, eSafety said. When new tech platforms emerge or existing ones changetheir purposes, eSafety said it may reassess those services. "We will continue to take a whole of ecosystem approach, but we want to reinforce that just because a service is excluded, it does not mean it is absolutely safe," eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant said in a statement.