In a dramatic development for digital regulation, YouTube will begin implementing Australia’s controversial under-16 social media ban next week despite Google’s fierce opposition to the measure. The tech giant maintains the legislation represents a fundamental misunderstanding of how children use the internet and could paradoxically increase risks to young users rather than protecting them.
Google’s senior public policy manager Rachel Lord outlined how the ban will strip away safety features that currently protect young users. Teens will lose access to default wellbeing settings designed to promote healthy usage patterns, while parents will be unable to monitor their children’s viewing habits or block inappropriate content. Lord stressed that while underage users can still watch videos in a signed-out state, this removes crucial protective guardrails.
Minister Anika Wells dismissed Google’s concerns during her National Press Club address, pointing out that if YouTube considers its platform unsafe in logged-out mode, that’s a problem the company needs to solve. She directed parents to YouTube Kids, a separate platform specifically designed for younger audiences that isn’t covered by the ban. Wells framed the legislation as reclaiming power from tech companies that deliberately target teenagers to maximize engagement and profits.
The government has acknowledged implementation won’t be perfect from day one, with Wells conceding it may take days or weeks for the ban to fully take effect. However, she emphasized that authorities won’t abandon the effort or let platforms evade responsibility. The minister praised advocacy from families who lost children to online bullying and mental health crises, describing the law as protecting Generation Alpha from predatory algorithms.
Lemon8’s decision to voluntarily implement age restrictions demonstrates the broader impact of Australia’s regulatory approach. The ByteDance-owned app will restrict users to those over 16 from December 10, following close monitoring by the eSafety Commissioner. Wells warned that the government maintains an agile, dynamic approach and will pursue any platform that becomes a destination for harmful content targeting young teens, regardless of its current status.