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Here are five takeaways from her speech.
No platform should be excluded
YouTube was initially exempt from the legislation, but Inman Grant said on Tuesday that the government should not name specific platforms as exclusions.
The commissioner said YouTube has mastered “persuasive design features” which drive users down algorithmic rabbit holes.
“YouTube is not a social media platform; it is a video streaming platform with a library of free, high-quality content, and TV screens are increasingly the most popular place to watch,” a company spokesperson said.

Messaging apps have been excluded from the ban. Source: AAP / Yui Mok/PA/Alamy
“eSafety’s advice goes against the government’s own commitment, its own research on community sentiment, independent research, and the view of key stakeholders in this debate, including the 36 Months campaign that spurred this legislation.
Google has urged the government to allow young Australians to continue to access YouTube.
‘Privacy, safety and rights working together’
These technologies are used to assess a user’s age online through methods like uploading ID or biometric face scanning.
“It highlights some of the real challenges from a policy perspective and a practical one as to how this social media ban is actually going to be implemented.”
Many children are interacting with harmful content online
“Perhaps the most troubling finding was that one in seven children we surveyed reported experiencing online grooming-like behaviour from adults or other children at least four years older.”

“This demonstrates that this all-too-human behaviour can migrate to wherever kids are online.”
Shifting the burden to the platforms
The commissioner said the responsibility for managing this “lies, as it should, with the platforms themselves and there are heavy penalties for companies who fail to take reasonable steps to prevent underage account holders onto their services — of up to $49.5 million per breach”.

The eSafety Commissioner says the teen social media ban will provide the time needed to increase children’s digital literacy. Source: Getty / Getty Images
“We are treating Big Tech like the extractive industry it has become,” she said.
“Teaching digital and algorithmic literacy is the closest thing we have to online swimming lessons,” she said.
Unregulated harms of generative AI
“Lessons from overseas have highlighted tragic cases where these chatbots have engaged in quasi-romantic relationships with teens that have tragically ended in suicide.”