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Elon Musk’s X Corporation has delivered a strong critique of the Australian government’s proposed social media ban for children under 16.
X corporation said it wanted to record its concern about the “unreasonably short timeframe” given to interested parties to send in submissions to a significant legislative proposal.
“X, as a platform, is not widely used by minors, currently has no lines of business that actively target minors, and does not allow advertisers to target minors.
“In line with our requirement that users must be 13 years of age to access the platform, we are currently examining different age assurance options, while carefully considering the legal global implications and privacy by design principles.”
The bill will subject social media corporations to fines of up to $49.5 million for failing to take “reasonable steps” to stop underage children from accessing their platforms.
The social media platform explained that these principles are included in international treaties, such as the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child.
“These concerns are shared by leading human rights organisations including your own Australian Human Rights Commission,” X said.
“This singular focus on social media platforms promotes an adversarial approach and fails to incentivise parents and caregivers to take responsibility for the online activities of the young people in their care,” X said.
The social media platform urged the Australian government to think more broadly about “flexible approaches to age assurance” before passing the law “on such an accelerated timescale.”
“We would also encourage far deeper consideration to be given by the Australian government to age verification or age assurance mechanisms at the device or app store level, as the most effective and privacy-protective solution to protect young Australians from accessing inappropriate content online,” X said.
“It is our contention that the Australian government and eSafety should work closely with international regulators and legislators on device or app store age verification options to understand where tensions exist with other regulations and the timing of implementation, including the UK and U.S.”
“Keeping children safe–wherever they are–is a collective responsibility, and the Albanese government is stepping up to play our role.”
While the Coalition has indicated it will support the bill, some backbenchers have raised concerns about digital ID and privacy.
Coalition Shadow Minister Bridget McKenzie did say on Nov. 26 that the opposition wanted to ensure the laws “don’t damage privacy” and make it compulsory for Australians to have digital IDs.
“But we do want strong, robust laws to protect kids under 16 on social media platforms,” she said in Parliament on Nov. 26.