Discover moreaustraliabanPlatform regulationSocial media platformsTeen Users Related posts: Australian regulator asks platforms to explain how they are tackling child sexual abuse material Gaps in Online Child Safety Measures, concerns around parental accountability, and other notes from Citizen Digital’s ...
这项法律得到了广泛支持,违反者可能面临高额罚款。 Australia has moved forward with a groundbreaking new law that bans children under the age of 16 from accessing social media, marking a significant step in the global reg...
The challenge is regulating not the platforms themselves, butthe business modelthat underpins them. Social media companies profit by keeping users engaged for as long as possible, and their algorithms are designed to encourage this engagement, often at the expense of users’ mental health....
(Google, Twitter, Twitch, TikTok and Discord) and this week’s announcement of the Industry Codes, global companies with an online presence are scrambling to understand exactly what steps are required to ensure safe use of their platforms in Australia and compliance with the Online Safety Act...
On paper, Utah’s sweeping social media legislation passed this week is an ambitious attempt to shield children and teens from the ill effects of social media.
In a letter to G20 Chairman Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, published by News Corp Australia on Tuesday, Morrison asked for social media governance to be made the top priority at the next meeting of world leaders in June. The letter was written after the terror attacks in Christchurch, ...
Australia's government has proposed asocial media ban for childrenunder the age of 16 which experts have described as a "momentous step," as parents globally call for greater regulation of tech companies. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese last week said the legislation will ...
Australia's Parliament passed legislation on Thursday that could imprison social media executives if their platforms stream real violence such as the New Zealand mosque shootings.
Australia, Britain, the EU and India, have all been working on tech-regulation. Thierry Breton, a senior EU official, noted that "It's not [Mr Musk's] rules that will apply here." Mr Musk's other investors are nervous. The more time he devotes to Twitter, the less he will have ...
Legal developments in Australia suggest that social media is expanding the potential for employer regulation of employees' private lives, but that, also, case law is suggesting measures to protect employees and employers against adverse consequences from their online activities. 展开 ...