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    Home»Technology»Reddit launches High Court challenge to Australia’s social media ban for kids
    Technology

    Reddit launches High Court challenge to Australia’s social media ban for kids

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteDecember 12, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Reddit has launched a challenge in Australia’s highest court against the nation’s landmark social media ban for children.

    The online forum is among 10 social media platforms which must bar Australians aged under 16 from having accounts, under a new law which began on Wednesday.

    The ban, which is being watched closely around the world, was justified by campaigners and the government as necessary to protect children from harmful content and algorithms.

    Reddit is complying with the ban, but in its case will argue that the policy has serious implications for privacy and political rights. It is the second such legal challenge, with two Australian teens also awaiting a High Court hearing.

    “There are more effective ways for the Australian government to accomplish our shared goal of protecting youth,” Reddit said in an update on its website.

    Australia’s Communications Minister Anika Wells has previously said the government will not be swayed by legal threats.

    “We will not be intimidated by big tech. On behalf of Australian parents, we will stand firm,” she told parliament after news of the first legal challenge broke last month.

    In that case, which the High Court has agreed to consider at an as-yet undecided date next year, two 15-year-olds from New South Wales are claiming the social media ban is unconstitutional as it infringes “the implied freedom of communication on governmental and political matters”.

    “Democracy doesn’t start at 16 as this law says it will,” Macey Newland told the BBC after their case was filed.

    The ban, which has excited global leaders and worried tech companies, has also been criticised by some who argued blanket prohibition is neither practical nor wise.

    Experts fear kids are going to circumvent the ban with relative ease – either by tricking the technology that’s performing the age checks, or by finding other, potentially less safe, places on the net to gather.

    And backed by some mental health advocates, many children have argued it robs young people of connection – particularly those from LGBTQ+, neurodivergent or rural communities – and will leave them less equipped to tackle the realities of life on the web.

    Various governments, from the US state of Florida to the European Union, have been experimenting with limiting children’s use of social media. But, along with a higher age limit of 16, Australia is the first jurisdiction to deny an exemption for parental approval in a policy like this – making its laws the world’s strictest.



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