Australia politics live: Snapchat, TikTok, Meta to comply with under-16s social media ban despite grumbles over ‘unevenly applied’ law

Australia politics live: Snapchat, TikTok, Meta to comply with under-16s social media ban despite grumbles over ‘unevenly applied’ law


Snapchat says it will comply with ‘unevenly applied’ under-16s social media ban

Australia politics live: Snapchat, TikTok, Meta to comply with under-16s social media ban despite grumbles over ‘unevenly applied’ law

Josh Taylor

Snapchat users under the age of 16 will be kicked off the platform from 10 December, with the company telling the parliament that although it disagrees that the ban should apply to Snapchat, it will comply with the law.

Jennifer Stout, Snap’s SVP of global policy and platform operations, said in her written opening statement to a parliamentary inquiry on age assurance measures that Snapchat should be excluded as it would meet the definition of a messaging service that is supposed to be excluded under the ban, but the company will accept the ruling of the eSafety commissioner. She said:

We will comply with the law, even though we believe it has been unevenly applied and risks undermining community confidence in the law.

Beginning 10 December, we will disable accounts for Australian Snapchatters under 16. We know this will be difficult for young people who use Snapchat to communicate with their closest friends and family.

Stout said the ban could see teens pushed on to platforms that are not included in the ban, and that are less safe as a result.

Meta and TikTok are also appearing before the inquiry this morning.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Labor will ‘probably end up’ doing EPBC deal with Coalition: Greens leader

Jumping back to Larissa Waters on RN Breakfast this morning, the Greens leader said she’d been appalled by what the environment minister “has put in these so-called nature laws”, and accused Labor of writing a blank cheque for business.

Waters says she’s willing to work with the government and negotiate on the legislation, but believes Murray Watt will come to an agreement with the other side.

At the moment, this package is written for big business. And the Coalition, I think, are posturing and probably will end up doing a deal with Labor on this. The Greens want to see environment laws that work for nature, protect communities’ rights, and actually don’t see coal and gas and logging fast-tracked unabated. We’re willing to talk to government about that.

Last night it was revealed the environment minister would be able to approve projects at odds with nature laws if it was deemed in the “national interest” under the new EPBC legislation.

Safe to say, Waters is not happy with that.

They’re [the laws] already riddled with loopholes. But rather than fix those loopholes, the proposal by this environment minister under this government is to add additional loopholes and yet more fast-track mechanisms for coal and gas.

Share



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *