Sydney:
US billionaire Elon Musk, proprietor of social media platform X, has criticised Australia’s proposed legislation to ban social media for kids beneath 16 and effective social media platforms of as much as A$49.5 million ($32 million) for firms for systemic breaches.
Australia’s centre-left authorities on Thursday launched the invoice in parliament. It plans to attempt an age-verification system to implement a social media age cut-off, a few of the hardest controls imposed by any nation so far.
“Looks as if a backdoor option to management entry to the Web by all Australians,” Musk, who views himself as a champion of free speech, mentioned in a reply late on Thursday to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s publish on X in regards to the invoice.
A number of international locations have already vowed to curb social media use by kids by way of laws, however Australia’s coverage might change into some of the stringent with no exemption for parental consent and pre-existing accounts.
France final yr proposed a ban on social media for these beneath 15 however allowed parental consent, whereas the US has for many years required expertise firms to hunt parental consent to entry the info of youngsters beneath 13.
Musk has beforehand clashed with Australia’s centre-left Labor authorities over its social media insurance policies and had referred to as it “fascists” over its misinformation legislation.
In April, X went to an Australian courtroom to problem a cyber regulator’s order for the removing of some posts in regards to the stabbing of a bishop in Sydney, prompting Albanese to name Musk an “conceited billionaire”.
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