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ACA warns Federal under-16 social media ban may increase risks, create unintended consequences for children online

The Aligned Council of Australia warns the Federal under-16 social media ban risks pushing children into unsafe online spaces, creating new privacy, policing, and criminal exploitation challenges nationwide.

By news@gippsland - 1st December 2025 - Back to News

Today the Aligned Council of Australia (ACA) warned that the federal government’s under-16 social media ban - due to take effect on 10 December - risks triggering a series of serious and avoidable unintended consequences.

ACA warns the under-16 social media ban increases online risks, complicates policing, threatens privacy, and could expose children to exploitation, mirroring issues seen in over-regulated markets like tobacco

ACA warns the under-16 social media ban increases online risks, complicates policing, threatens privacy, and could expose children to exploitation, mirroring issues seen in over-regulated markets like tobacco

Social media risks

ACA Acting CEO, Barbara Mavridis, said, "Children’s safety is absolutely paramount - but policy made on the run is not the way to protect them. Simply banning under-16s from social media will not keep them safe." Ms Mavridis said the ban misunderstands how children use technology and will likely drive them into far more dangerous online environments.

"You cannot eliminate inappropriate content from the internet. What this policy will do is push children underground - creating false accounts, bypassing the system, and entering platforms where predators operate with far less scrutiny," she said.

ACA added that online criminals and dark-web predators "thrive when children are forced out of regulated spaces", making the job of law-enforcement agencies dramatically more difficult. "This is a policy that sounds good but works badly. It creates new risks, new loopholes, and new vulnerabilities. And instead of improving child safety, it will make policing online crime significantly more complex."

Privacy concerns raised

ACA also highlighted the broader privacy implications, "This kind of flawed policy inevitably forces older Australians - anyone over 16 - into yet another identification system. It expands data collection, erodes privacy, and places more personal information into the hands of private companies," Ms Mavridis said.

She compared the situation to heavily regulated markets like tobacco, "In over-regulated environments, organised crime always steps in. We’ve seen it in the tobacco industry, and we will see it here - but this time, the victims will be children. It is only a matter of time before Parliament is forced to review the fallout of this legislation." ACA’s 39+ Member Groups - representing almost two million Australians - have expressed deep concern about the national impacts of this rushed and poorly designed policy.

Pictures from Google Gemini website.


Source: http://gippsland.com/

Published by: news@gippsland.com



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