Skip to content
National News Current Affairs, Youth

Are we ready for Australia’s world-first social media ban? UNSW hosts critical conversation

UNSW Sydney 2 mins read
  • Panel event to explore public and industry readiness for social media age limit
  • Experts will address online risks and how to protect under-16s
  • Event moderated by Professor Michael Salter, Director of Childlight East Asia and Pacific Hub

 

Australia will soon enforce world-first legislation, establishing a minimum age to create and maintain social media accounts. The policy, due to come into effect in December, has drawn both praise and criticism, with the Federal Government saying it’s part of a push to protect young people online.

 

Platforms will face multi-million-dollar fines if they don’t take reasonable steps to ensure children under 16 are not using their services. But questions remain over how the law will be policed and exactly which platforms will be affected.

 

One of the world’s leading authorities on child sexual exploitation and abuse, UNSW’s Professor Michael Salter, says the rapid increase in online sexual extortion illustrates the dangers of social media for children.

 

Social media was made by adults, for adults, and aggressively marketed to children. The social media ‘ban’ is no different to the age ‘bans’ that we apply to alcohol, cigarettes or driving a car,” he says.

 

“It’s possible to design social media services that are safe and healthy for children. But companies have pursued profit above safety and encouraged children to use services where they can be easily targeted by adult perpetrators.”

 

Prof. Salter will moderate a distinguished panel of experts, analysing the role of social media regulation, how an age limit will work and if parents and guardians are prepared for the change.

 

Playground or Hunting Ground: Kids on Social Media is the final Legal Hour panel event of 2025. The bi-annual signature event showcases UNSW Law & Justice experts, alumni and community leaders in a conversation on major legal issues shaping Australia’s future.

 

The panel includes:

 

Associate Professor Katharine Kemp leads UNSW’s Public Interest Law & Tech Initiative. She says the under-16s social media law goes both too far and not far enough.

“It’s overbroad in that it has an excessive impact on beneficial uses of some of these platform services by children and too great an impact on the privacy of all Australian internet users. The solution is also too narrow in that it fails to get to the heart of the matter: the deeply unsafe design of online spaces for any kids who get around the ban, or turn to even worse corners of the internet, or just turn 16,” A/Prof. Kemp says.

“The design of the law was rushed with an extraordinarily short consultation period of one day. This meant that the government didn’t hear from important experts, for example, from psychology, suicide prevention and children’s rights advocates.”

 

Media welcome to attend:

Time: Thursday 14 August, 6-8PM

Location: The Mint, 10 Macquarie St, Sydney


Contact details:

Interviews available on request. Please contact:


Ashleigh Steele
Communication Officer, UNSW Sydney
0421 208 805
[email protected]


Kate Newton
News & Content Officer,
UNSW Law & Justice
[email protected]

 

Media

More from this category

  • National News Current Affairs, Political
  • 16/03/2026
  • 16:49
Australian Conservation Foundation

ACF calls for war profits tax on big gas as rates tipped to rise today

Under embargo: 12.01am 17 March2026 The Australian Conservation Foundation is calling on the Federal government to immediately enforce a 25% war profits tax on all Australian gas exports. The horrifying attacks on people and mass disruption in the Strait of Hormuz are causing extreme volatility in global energy markets – and Australian gas corporations are, shockingly, reaping huge rewards. Australia’s second-biggest oil and gas producer, Santos, is reportedlymaking deals with commodities traders for a single cargo worth as much as $121 million – that’s roughly $70 million more than before the war in Iran. “People are being killed, maimed and…

  • Building Construction, National News Current Affairs
  • 14/03/2026
  • 06:30
Australian Institute of Architects

Design Thinking Must Lead Nation-Building Infrastructure

The Australian Institute of Architects welcomes Infrastructure Australia’s 2026 Infrastructure Priority List, highlighting 68 key projects for transport, water, freight, and energy—but insists design thinking must drive this work to deliver lasting value. National President Adam Haddow FRAIA emphasised: “Establishing priorities is vital, we need to ensure these priorities can also deliver impact, and create liveable and resilient communities to unlock affordable housing.” High-capacity urban transport and climate-resilient water systems are generational gamechangers, but only with strong design leadership will that deliver a boost to productivity and connectivity. “Good design has a direct bearing on whether infrastructure contributes positively to…

  • National News Current Affairs, Women
  • 11/03/2026
  • 19:01
Monash University

Monash expert reaction: New Louis Theroux Netflix feature ‘Inside the Manosphere’

EMBARGO TIME: 11th March at 7:01PM AEDT Monash University experts are available to provide commentary ahead of the global release of Louis Theroux’s first…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.