Expert OpinionRegulatory/PolicySector Analysis

Australia Says Its Teen Social Media Is The 'First Domino' In Global Effort To Reign In Tech Giants As Meta Blocks Instagram, Facebook Accounts

Benzingaβ€’December 05, 2025 at 3:28 AMβ€’Full Content
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Meta Platforms, Inc.
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Gist

Australia's new social media age ban targeting under-16s is seen as a global catalyst to regulate Big Tech, with Meta and others enforcing account restrictions ahead of the law's Dec. 10 rollout.

LLM Summary

Australia has enacted a law restricting social media use for under-16s, prompting Meta to deactivate Instagram, Facebook, and Threads accounts for Australian teens. The eSafety Commissioner calls it the 'first domino' in a global regulatory movement, while platforms like TikTok, Snapchat, and YouTube are also complying. The law exempts certain platforms like Discord and YouTube Kids, and U.S. lawmakers have responded with scrutiny.

Full Article Content

Meta Platforms, Inc. (NASDAQ: META) has started deactivating Instagram, Facebook and Threads accounts belonging to Australian users under 16, signaling what eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant calls the "first domino" in a global push to regulate Big Tech.

Australia Says Ban Is Just The Beginning: eSafety Commissioner

On Thursday, Australia's eSafety CommissionerInman Grant said that she initially had reservations about the "blunt-force" approach but said incremental fixes had failed, reported Reuters.

"We've reached a tipping point," she said at the Sydney Dialogue cyber summit, adding that social media companies are powered by user data and built with "harmful, deceptive design features" that even adults struggle to resist.

She believes other governments are closely watching Australia's move and described it as "the first domino" in a broader global effort to rein in tech giants.

In November, Malaysia announced that starting Jan. 1, 2026, the minimum age for social media accounts will rise to 16, requiring platforms to verify users' identities via eKYC checks using official documents under its Online Safety Act.

Platforms Begin Mass Account Lockouts

Although the law takes effect Dec. 10, Meta began cutting off underage accounts this week.

Instagram begins booting under 16's from the platform.
Because the Australian government is now global speech Karen.
Kids will remember.
I hope this blows up in the establishments face.
I really do. pic.twitter.com/nPPD6jOVF6
β€” Matthew Camenzuli (@Matt\Camenzuli) November 25, 2025

ByteDance-owned TikTok and Snap Inc.’s (NYSE: SNAP) Snapchat and YouTube, a subsidiary of Alphabet Inc.’s (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) Google, are also notifying users flagged as under 16.

Earlier this week, YouTube Australia announced that starting Dec. 10, anyone under 16 in Australia will be automatically logged out of their accounts when the Social Media Minimum Age Act comes into effect.

Google's platform said it is following the rules despite opposing its inclusion in the crackdown, noting that he law will require teens to use YouTube without the safeguards available to signed-in users.

Roughly 96% of Australians under 16 β€” more than 1 million teens β€” have social media accounts, the regulator estimates.

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Ban Exempts Discord, Roblox And YouTube Kids

Passed in late 2024, the law also mandates platforms like Reddit Inc. (NYSE: RDDT), X and Twitch to take "reasonable steps" to block users under 16 from creating accounts.

Australia's eSafety Commissioner determined that certain platforms β€” including Discord, Roblox, WhatsApp, Google Classroom, Pinterest (NYSE: PINS), Microsoft Corp’s (NASDAQ: MSFT) GitHub and YouTube Kids β€” do not qualify as age-restricted social media and therefore will be exempt from the ban.

US Lawmakers Step In

Inman Grant said platforms had lobbied aggressively against the ban, even appealing to the U.S. government.

She noted the irony of the House Judiciary Committee asking her to testify on what it called Australia's attempt to exert influence over American free speech, saying the request itself was a form of "extra-territorial reach," the report noted.

Metadata

Author:
Ananya Gairola
Image URL:
https://cdn.benzinga.com/files/imagecache/2048x1536xUP/images/story/2025/12/04/Gerber-Says-Metas-Glasses-Hint-at-a-Phon.jpeg
Tickers:
GOOG, GOOGL, META, MSFT, PINS, RDDT, SNAP
Updated At:
December 04, 2025 at 11:28 PM
Benzinga Channels:
News, Tech
Benzinga Tags:
Australia, eSafety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, Social Media Minimum Age Act
Teaser:
Meta, TikTok, Snapchat, and YouTube are beginning to block or log out Australian users under 16 ahead of the country's Dec. 10 social media ban, which aims to protect minors while exempting certain platforms and is being watched globally as a potential model for regulating Big Tech.
Benzinga Stocks:
GOOG (NASDAQ), GOOGL (NASDAQ), META (NASDAQ), MSFT (NASDAQ), PINS (NYSE), RDDT (NYSE), SNAP (NYSE)
Benzinga Article ID:
49224480