Australia's teen social media ban fails to clear first hurdle in age checks, says study
XLC•Criticism of the 2025 trial continues
After an initial claim that Australia's ban had wiped some 4.7 million suspected underage accounts in a month, the rollout has faced near-constant reports of non-compliance. By March, the government warned of potential enforcement lawsuits against five platforms, and last month said it was doubling the maximum fine, accusing the platforms of setting the ban up to fail.
But the platforms have said they are following the regulator's guidance which prioritises low-friction vetting as a first step. The platforms are prohibited from relying solely on government-issued identification, due to privacy concerns.
Some advisers to Hammond's original trial said they had warned throughout the process that it was undermined by lack of testing for real-life circumvention, which includes under-16s entering false birthdates.
"We did want to talk about circumvention, but we kept on being told that that wasn't part of the actual trial," said Colm Gannon, Australia CEO of the International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children, who advised the project.




