Australia is about executing laws to protect children from social media
The Australian government is working with states and regions to age new laws that define the ages of users to social media, as part of efforts aimed at protecting the mental health of children and removing the inappropriate content on the Internet. Prime Minister Anthony Albanizi will introduce new laws before the election is prescribed during the next nine months, indicating that parents ‘work without a map’ in an attempt to deal with the psychological consequences caused by social media. ‘There has been no generation of this challenge facing this challenge before. There is often nothing social on social media, as children are away from real friends and real experiences. ‘ Prime Minister Anthony Albaniz is scheduled to represent the new laws before the election was prescribed during the next nine months, saying that parents work ‘without a map’ to address the effects of mental health caused by social media. A specific age limit has not yet been determined for the use of social media, as the government is currently experimenting with age verification technology to limit children’s access to inappropriate content, including pornography. The government is still holding consultations on how to apply the ban. ‘Albanizi’ told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in its statements today that the government is considering drawing up the highest age restriction between 14 and 16 years of banning. He added: “We are watching how to implement it. It is a global matter with which governments around the world are trying to go.” In a poll conducted by the Essential Media in June, 68% of Australians supported the imposition of an age end for social media, while only 15% opposed. As it came to power in May 2022, the action government with a central left wing took several steps to address the problems associated with harmful content via the Internet. In the first half of 2024, the government filed a lawsuit against the social media platform “X” to try to force it to remove footage from a violent terror attack in Sydney.