Australia’s new social media law, which bans children under 16 from platforms like YouTube, is facing a surprising critic. YouTube itself is warning that the upcoming change will likely make the Internet less safe for kids.
Starting in December, young teens will be blocked from creating accounts and existing ones will be deactivated. While this might seem like a straightforward way to protect them, YouTube argues it removes a crucial layer of safety: parental oversight.
When a child has an account, a parent can use built-in tools to supervise them. They can set content filters, block certain channels, and activate well-being reminders that encourage breaks. Once the ban is in place, kids will be logged out. They can still watch videos anonymously, but parents will lose all ability to manage or monitor that experience.
YouTube’s position is that its years of safety work will be undone. The company calls the law “rushed” and says it misunderstands how families actually use the platform for supervised learning and entertainment.
The Australian government is pushing back hard. A government minister called YouTube’s concern “outright weird”, arguing that if the platform admits it has dangers, it should fix them. Officials point out that YouTube was the top place where children reported seeing harmful content, which is why it was added to the ban list.
As the start date nears, both sides are digging in. The government sees this as a necessary step to break the addictive grip of social media on a young generation. YouTube sees it as a step backward that trades-controlled access for unchecked, anonymous browsing. The standoff shows just how difficult it is to balance protection with practicality in the digital world





















