Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

Australia's Teen Social Media Ban Isn't Working. Half Their Teens Still Have Access, Survey Finds

read original get Parental Control Smartphone App → more articles
Why This Matters

The Australian social media ban for under-16s highlights the challenges of enforcing digital restrictions among teens, who are finding ways to bypass these measures through VPNs, facial recognition tricks, and other methods. This underscores the difficulty regulators face in controlling online access for minors and raises questions about the effectiveness of such bans in protecting youth. For the tech industry, it emphasizes the need for more sophisticated age verification systems and responsible platform management to ensure compliance and safeguard young users.

Key Takeaways

After Australia banned social media for users younger than 16, teenagers "immediately worked to circumvent the restrictions," reports Fortune:

14-year-old in New South Wales, told The Washington Post in December 2025, just before the implementation of the ban, she planned to use her mother's face ID to log in to Snapchat and . In a Reddit thread on ways to bypass the ban, one user suggested using a printed mesh face mask from Temu to outsmart apps' facial recognition tools. Others still have tried VPNs that obscure their locations.

A new report suggests these efforts are working. In a survey of 1,050 Australians ages 12 to 15 conducted last month, the UK-based suicide prevention organization the Molly Rose Foundation found more than 60% of teens who had social media accounts before the ban still had access to at least one of those platforms. Social media sites including TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram, have retained more than half of their users under 16. About two-thirds of young users say these platforms have taken "no action" to remove or reactive accounts that existed before the restrictions.

The survey comes at the heels of the Australian internet regulator calling for an investigation into the five largest social media platforms over potential breaches of the ban.

The article points out that "Greece, France, Indonesia, Austria, Spain, and the UK have or are considering similar action, and eight U.S. states are weighing legislation that would put guardrails or ban social media use for minors.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.