The government is being pretty coy about the details, so most of the article is necessarily conjecture.

Selected excerpts from the article:

The definition of a social media service, as per the Online Safety Act

An electronic service that satisfies the following conditions:

  1. The sole or primary purpose of the service is to enable online social interaction between two or more end users;
  2. The service allows end users to link to, or interact with, some or all of the other end users;
  3. The service allows end users to post material on the service.

Under the proposed changes, it will be the responsibility of social media companies to take reasonable steps to block people under 16.

How will your age be verified?

The government's legislation won't specify the technical method for proving a person's age.

Several options are on the table, including providing ID and biometrics such as face scanning.

The government's currently running an age assurance trial to assess all the methods, and it's scheduled to continue into 2025.

Based on the results of that trial, eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant will make recommendations to platforms.

It's possible that Australians will be asked to provide their IDs or biometric data directly to social media companies in order to use their platforms, but that's not guaranteed.

Many of the big players, including Meta, have instead argued for the age verification onus to be placed on app stores, rather than individual platforms, as that would mean proving your age once — rather than every time you sign up to a platform.

It's also possible that a third-party company that specialises in ID verification will act as a go-between between users and social media platforms.

No matter which model is adopted, the prime minister has said privacy protections will be introduced to cover any data people end up providing.

  • fubbernuckin@lemmy.dbzer0.com
    ·
    vor 15 Tagen

    I can't believe how fucked this is. Social media isn't always the healthiest thing, but banning it? I was hardly allowed to leave my house as a kid, i have no idea what i would've done if i couldn't talk to my peers online.

  • rcbrk@lemmy.ml
    hexagon
    ·
    vor 15 Tagen

    What will this mean for Lemmy instances? XMPP servers? Email servers?

    What if a 15 year old runs their own personal Mastodon server? LoL this is gonna be yet another entertaining Australian government shitshow.

  • GolfNovemberUniform@lemmy.ml
    ·
    vor 14 Tagen

    No matter which model is adopted, the prime minister has said privacy protections will be introduced to cover any data people end up providing.

    Sure. Now stop thinking of ridiculous legal aspects and fight for your privacy.

  • Matt@lemmy.ml
    ·
    vor 13 Tagen

    If they want to employ bank-style KYC, then no. >!Fediverse is better.!<

  • pineapple@lemmy.ml
    ·
    vor 13 Tagen

    I think there needs to be some legislation done in terms of limiting commercial social media platforms although I'm not sure how someone would go about this. Would they ban social media cites that take peoples data? maybe they should ban cites that display ads? What about making all social media cites to support an open protocol like activity pub or similar so your not locked into using there scummy closed source apps.