Landmark legislation sees the Australian government committed to the novel step of child protection by banning social media for under sixteens.

  • @[email protected]
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    236 minutes ago

    Now kids will be forced to hide being a victim of cyber-bullying from their parents. Great work!

    • Phoenixz
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      014 minutes ago

      If they don’t have an online presence and neither do their peers, how would they be cyber bullied?

      I’m sure bullying will go on, old school, in the streets, but cyber bullying is one of the things that will go away with this

      I think this is great. There are about one or two generations worth of people that had social media while being kids and I think they should stop acting as if it’s the end of the world if it would go away. I fully understand that you grew up with it and don’t know any netter but believe you me: you can do without, you can survive without, you will be better without.

      Go outside, touch grass, have fun, be a kid again.

  • @[email protected]
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    153 hours ago

    Oh those poor kids.

    I remember when we banned porn for the under 18s and now nobody under 18 can access porn.

    • FlashMobOfOne
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      31 hour ago

      This is my favorite argument against government regulation.

      Anything not foolproof definitely isn’t worth doing at all.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    8 hours ago

    It’s still not entirely clear how the Australian government thinks they’re actually going to enforce this.

    Plenty of web services already require you to state your age to use them and I believe a large majority of users just coincidentally happen to be born on January 1st, 1900 as a result.

    If they’re expecting these tech companies to be gathering and storing peoples’ government ID’s, or something, somebody needs to carefully explain to them using small words why this is a monumentally stupid idea. Does something need to be done about social media addiction and the rampant sketchy behavior of the tech giants? Yes, probably. Is a blanket ban ever the actual solution to anything? No, very rarely.

    It’s just apparently all anyone can come up with when they’ve got government-brain.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 hours ago

      What will be interesting for sure is the difference of this approach vs. the porn approach in the southern US. In this case in Australia? Social media companies will tip toe any line they can because there is so much money to be made and they want every dollar.

      PornHub? They just blocked access in 17 states instead of even trying to worry about age verification. They’re still getting their users, but now they’re coming over VPN.

      https://www.cbsnews.com/miami/news/pornhub-florida-vpn-google-searches-skyrocket/

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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        53 hours ago

        And, Pornhub can probably play the waiting game in those states as well. Enough people in those places will probably get pissed off enough eventually to pressure their legislators into walking those laws back. It might just take a year or two. I imagine everyone involved already knows, but the idiots who wrote the laws need to wait for the headlines to cool off a bit before they can backpedal, in order to save face.

        I imagine Facebook or someone of similar size could do the same in Aus. All they have to do is refuse to serve anything to Aussie IP addresses except a message that says, “Sorry, we can’t serve your country anymore because of a law passed by [legislator.] Remember, this is all his fault.”

        Politicians infamously do not give a flying fuck about the opinions of minors, but if they piss everyone else off too the people responsible will either be out on their ears next election or buried under an avalanche of nasty letters from their 40-and-up constituency.

    • @[email protected]
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      116 hours ago

      The commissioner is supposed to come up with guidelines for what is a reasonable check, so we find out when they come up with it I guess 🤷

    • @[email protected]
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      86 hours ago

      it’s still not entirely clear how the Australian government thinks they’re actually going to enforce this.

      “Awww shucks everyone, looks like we don’t get to have internet privacy after all. Don’t worry, it’s FOR THE CHILDREN.”

      • @[email protected]
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        44 hours ago

        Another way to think about this: Why should you have to give random companies your ID because Australian teens need to prove their age?

    • @[email protected]
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      188 hours ago

      They’ve set it up so it’s a legal mess. The platforms aren’t given any mechanism to actually perform verifications (no double blind id system, for example) but are legally on the hook for each and every under-16 on the platforms. A quote in the article suggests it should be the app stores verifying which is even more fucking stupid.

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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        6 hours ago

        Well, I know how that would go if I were a globe-spanning social media giant. Given that the entirety of the Australian market is roughly the size of New York state (~26 vs ~20 million people), I would say, “Nah mate, we just won’t do business in Oz anymore. Bye.”

        Vanishingly few business make a “New York only” version of their product because it’s simply not worth it. Australia already suffers under this problem for a great deal of physical products. Ask any computer nerd about that, when trying to source parts and often video game titles as well. Shipping things to the Antipodes and/or dealing with Antipodean regulations is expensive, for an objectively low number of potential sales.

        It would not surprise me to learn if it follows that Australia generates roughly 1.7% of the revenue for Facebook or whoever as, say, India. So in other words, bupkis.

        • @[email protected]
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          234 minutes ago

          Platforms love to use this threat… “if you regulate us we’ll just withdraw services in your jurisdiction”. They never do, and governments shouldn’t respond to threats like that in any case. If one or other platform were to restrict services in Aus, it would just increase the potential revenue for some other platform.

      • @[email protected]
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        28 hours ago

        A quote in the article suggests it should be the app stores verifying which is even more fucking stupid.

        Why?

        • @[email protected]
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          56 hours ago

          Because how would you do that on desktop? Or on a degoogled phone? Or if the download was via an apk from elsewhere?

            • @[email protected]
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              137 hours ago

              The quote says that app stores should be responsible for verifying age, but social media is not limited to apps - they’re just one of multiple user interfaces for interacting with social networks. So that alone cannot solve the problem.

              Sorry for the confusion

        • @[email protected]
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          47 hours ago

          Because the app store isn’t the only way to install an app. It is trivially easy to side load apps and it’s well within the technologic skillset of the average 12 year old.

  • @[email protected]
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    178 hours ago

    Based on what I’ve seen over the last few years, it’s the over-16s that should probably be banned from social media.

  • @[email protected]
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    208 hours ago

    Problem: Higher childhood depression rates linked to social media usage, social media caused disruption in education (like usage in schools), privacy violation of minors, etc.

    An enforceable, common sense solution: Very strict privacy protection laws, that would end up protecting everybody, including minors. Better, kid friendly urban infrastructure like dedicated bike paths protected from car traffic, better pedestrian areas, parks and so on. Kids will get outside their house if there is a kid friendly outside. A greener, more human friendly outside where you can socialize with other humans would always be preferred over doom scrolling online. For the disruption in education issue, it is very education system dependent.

    What solution these people came up with: Make it illegal for individuals under the age of 16 to create social media accounts. How do they enforce this? No idea. Does this solve any of the above problems? No. Is this performative? Yes.

    Speaking from personal experience, social media was one of the most liberating tools for me as a kid. I lived in a shitty, conservative country and was gay. Social media told me that I wasn’t disgusting. I was always more of a lurker than a poster, so I thankfully didn’t really experience being contacted by groomers and so on. However, many of my friends who posted their images and stuff almost always got pedos in their DMs, so that’s a very real issue.

    I could ask my silly little questions related to astrophysics on Reddit and get really good answers. Noone around me irl was ever interested/able to talk about stuff like this. I could explore different political ideologies, get into related servers on Discord and learn more about this. None of this was possible without social media.

    Banning social media outright is such a boomer move lol. Doing so isn’t going to solve any real problems associated with childhood social media usage. It’s just going to give the jackass parents complaining about this a false sense of security, when the kids still end up suffering.

    • @[email protected]
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      129 minutes ago

      This is a false dichotomy.

      You can regulate social media platforms and have great infrastructure.

      Your own childhood sounds tough, but advocating for social media as a way to mitigate shitty communities is a weird take.

  • CrimeDad
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    159 hours ago

    What happens if an Australian kid starts running their own Pixelfed or Lemmy site?

    • @[email protected]
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      128 hours ago

      My instance is in Australia, and the new laws affect social media like Lemmy. The hard part is that there apparently isn’t much guidance on how to follow the law. Do you have to use ID? Is a location-specific popup making you state that you’re 16+ enough? Nobody knows.

      • CrimeDad
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        66 hours ago

        If you are the sole user on your own ActivityPub site running on your own server, can it even be called a social media site?

      • @[email protected]
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        26 hours ago

        I think a mastodon instance started asking aussies to send a pic of them with a bottle of vodka or a pack of smokes.

      • CrimeDad
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        66 hours ago

        I’m not sure that a self hosted ActivityPub site with a single user could reasonably be called a social media site. I wonder how the law defines a social media site.

  • @[email protected]
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    26 hours ago

    The Australian government is to cowardly to regulate social media to be healthy for all ages.

    • @[email protected]
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      66 hours ago

      If the law was well made, it wouldn’t applly to websites under a certain threshold of active users.

      I mean you can’t expect octopusforums.co with 40 cephalopod enthusiasts to ID check australians can you.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 hours ago

        I don’t know what it’s like in Australia, but here in the USA the large websites write laws like that specifically to prevent competition from small websites.

        Better make an octopus Facebook group instead.

        • @[email protected]
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          4 hours ago

          Yes, big companies have lobbying which makes rules basically horrible for small companies.

          The Megacorps don’t mind “red tape” because all they have to do is hire a lawyer and bribe the right people but small companies suffer the actual consequences.

          Ie. In the country I live in, if I want to sell chicken eggs from my backyard chickens, I need to submit 3 forms that are basically impossible to without hiring a lawyer every YEAR, and pay for an inspection check every 2 years which costs a lot. That kind of environment which applies to basically any action a company wants to do makes it impossible for anyone but mid-large companies to do things.

  • @[email protected]
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    05 hours ago

    Absolute stupidity and a waste of taxpayers’ money spending so much time on this nonsense.

    These incompetent morons are pretty much guaranteeing that they will lose the next election. In the middle of a housing and inflation crisis this is what these fuckheads decided was important.

    I loathe the opposition, but it’s hard to defend the sheer incompetence the Labor Party has displayed their entire term.

    • @[email protected]
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      124 minutes ago

      With great sadness I have to agree with you.

      It’s just one shit show after another. Voice to parliament, live export ban, and now this. Meanwhile Australians are being ground into the dust by price gouging corporations and interest rate hikes.

      That said I am in support of this legislation, but it’s just not enough.

  • Ogmios
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    59 hours ago

    I’m just waiting until they remember why borders are a thing that exists.

  • katy ✨
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    -17 hours ago

    this isn’t for the safety of kids; it’s to eliminate the ability for queer kids to find a community.

    • @[email protected]
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      67 hours ago

      No offence but that’s shortsighted to be generous. I feel like half of lemmy will carry on about social media being cancer, the frequent articles citing negative effects of SM on mental health and the fact that multiple social media companies are accused of propagating misinformation (Zuckerberg face sure is in lemmy a lot lately for some reason). Like Zuck has all but greenlit harassing lgbt+ people on FB and the SM ban is to stop gay kids finding a community? Please. Corporate SM is a blight and before someone says lemmy/reddit check the mod logs or the fact that lemmy only got CSAM under control relatively recently before suggesting it’s fine for kids.

  • FlashMobOfOne
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    -18 hours ago

    I am so, so glad to see that at least one country in the world is willing to tackle this problem.

    Also a little depressed that every comment thread about this law boils down to: “It’s hard. Might as well not do it at all,” especially from people who (rightly) think we need to ban guns every time a school gets shot up here in the US, which would be monumentally difficult socially but 100% needs to happen.

    • @[email protected]
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      121 minutes ago

      Yeah I don’t really understand the pile on.

      Enforcement is not important in any way. If most kids are on social presently, then by making it illegal it just won’t be a place for kids to congregate any more. What would be the point of lying about your age to create a facebook account if none of your friends are there.

      Sure, some kids will still be on social, perhaps most kids will be, but there’s no doubt in my mind that their usage will diminish dramatically. That’s how public health works.