CAN WE REALLY BAN KIDS FROM SOCIAL MEDIA? l The Aussies are trying but there are many hurdles to deal with

SYDNEY.—It took 13-year-old Isobel less than five minutes to outsmart Australia’s “world-leading” social media ban for children.

A notification from Snapchat, one of the ten platforms affected, had lit up her screen, warning she’d be booted off when the law kicked in this week — if she couldn’t prove she was over 16.

“I got a photo of my mum, and I stuck it in front of the camera and it just let me through. It said thanks for verifying your age,” Isobel claims. “I’ve heard someone used Beyoncé’s face,” she adds. “I texted her,” she gestures to her mum Mel, “and I was like, ‘Hey Mummy, I got past the social media ban’ and she was just like, ‘Oh, you monkey’.”

It made her laugh, Mel explains: “This is exactly what I thought was going to happen.”

Though she had let Isobel use TikTok and Snapchat with tight supervision —preferring that to the teenager using it covertly —she had been hoping the ban, as promised, would help parents like her protect their children from the dangers of the online world.

That hope has now wavered, as a series of experts — and kids themselves —sound the alarm on the viability and safety of the landmark policy, which is being closely watched around the globe and eyed with trepidation by some of its most influential companies.

There’s concern about the reliability of the technology enforcing the ban, along with fears it could isolate vulnerable children and push others into darker, less-regulated corners of the web.

The question nervously being asked in the halls of Canberra, in households across the nation, and in tech boardrooms around the world: is this actually going to work?

You’d struggle to find anyone in Australia who feels social media companies are doing enough to shield users – particularly children – from harm on their platforms. Their protestations to the contrary fall on unsympathetic ears.

“We have zero faith the tech companies will do anything other than protect their profits,” Dany Elachi, a father of five and anti-smartphone campaigner, tells the BBC.

“They’ve had ample opportunity to show they take children’s wellbeing seriously and they’ve failed at every turn.”

Detailing how bullying —inescapable due to social media— had culminated in her 15-year-old daughter’s suicide, Emma Mason asked world leaders at the UN last month: “How many more Tillys must die?”

The policy— limited versions of which have been attempted with little success by other jurisdictions around the world — would help free children from addictive algorithms exposing them to harmful content like violence, pornography and misinformation, proponents said. It would also reduce cyber-bullying and online child exploitation. It would force kids outside, help them sleep better, improve their physical and mental health, it was suggested.

Noticeably absent from Albanese’s announcement was a plan on exactly how the government was going to do this – it gave itself a year to work that out.

Within weeks, it had rushed a skeletal bill through parliament, after allowing less than 48 hours for the public to make submissions on the law.

There’s concern about the reliability of the technology enforcing the ban, along with fears it could isolate vulnerable children and push others into darker, less-regulated corners of the web

HOW WILL IT BE ENFORCED?

A year later, and days out from the official start of the law, questions remain.

A government-funded, industry-run trial looked at the main methods of age assurance and earlier this year reported all were technically possible— but none were foolproof and all carried risks.

Verification using IDs was the most accurate approach, but that requires users to hand over sensitive and important documents when polling shows most Australians don’t trust social media firms.

Age inference, which draws conclusions based on users’ online activity, and facial assessment technology both lacked the precision to be reliably applied to teenagers.

For example, the accuracy of face scans – already rolled out by Meta and Snapchat for suspected underage users – falters for people two to three years either side of 16; the intended target.

Still, the report found age assurance technologies can be “private, robust and effective”, especially when layered.

“When you go to a bottle shop and they look you up and down and go, ‘Mmm not really sure’, they ask you for some ID… It’s the same principle,” says Tony Allen, who heads the UK-based Age Check Certification Scheme and ran the trial.

Its findings weren’t without controversy. Two former advisory board members levelled accusations of bias and “privacy-washing”. And though the trial considered ways teenagers might bypass barriers, it was not tasked with testing them.

Tips have flooded social media: everything from signing up with a parent’s email and moving to platforms not explicitly named on the government’s hit list, to using VPNs, which can disguise a user’s location.

There was a temporary surge in VPN use in the UK after it introduced tougher age checks for pornography earlier this year, and experts are expecting the same here.

Polling conducted for the government in May indicated a third of parents intended to help their kids circumvent the ban, and an experiment by the University of Melbourne showed that a $22 Halloween mask was enough to defeat facial assessment technology in some cases.

Proponents of age assurance contend that the technology to thwart circumvention exists. A photo, like Isobel says she used, is not supposed to fool these checks.

The BBC asked Snapchat about this, and a spokesperson said the firm had consistently expressed concern about the “technical challenges” of enforcing the ban: “This is one such challenge.”

The fines offer little incentive to behave, he says. Facebook, for example, earns that amount globally in under two hours. “It’s a parking ticket.”

Then there’s the inevitable legal challenges. Two teenagers have already filed a case in the nation’s highest court, alleging the law is unconstitutional and Orwellian. Alphabet, which owns YouTube and Google, is also apparently considering its own challenge. Human rights groups and a smattering of legal experts have raised their hackles too.

WILL IT REDUCE HARM?

Putting aside the question of whether it can be done, many are still asking: should it?

First, there is concern that this policy pushes children into darker parts of the web.

Will it be gaming site chatrooms, which the Australia Federal Police have warned are hotbeds for radicalisation but are excluded from the ban?

Will it be sites like Omegle, which previous generations turned to when told they were too young for mainstream social media? It allowed users to video chat randomly selected strangers and was shut down two years ago over its failure to protect minors from predators.

Copycats have quickly replaced it.

Children can also still browse on several of the apps, like TikTok and YouTube, without accounts, a potentially riskier minefield of unfiltered content and advertisements – several platforms currently limit these on minors’ accounts.— BBC

Related Posts

I’VE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS, SAYS CAPTAIN RAMBO, AS HE BREAKS DOWN AFTER RETRIEVING THREE BODIES FROM BUDIRIRO POOL OF DEATH

Latwell Nyangu FOR eighteen years, Victor Kazembe, popularly known as ‘Coach Rambo’, has been retrieving bodies. But, he has never seen anything like what confronted him when he dived into…

MOSQUITO GETS CAR BUT HE DOESN’T HAVE A LICENCE

Arron Nyamayaro FORMER Commonwealth flyweight boxing champion, Arifonso “Mosquito” Zvenyika, DOES NOT have a driver’s licence. Yesterday, Mosquito received a brand new car and cash from Harare businessman Wicknell Chivayo.…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

×
×