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Australia’s eSafety commissioner Julie Inman Grant has rejected a US politician’s claim that she is a “zealot for global takedowns”.
Jim Jordan, the US Republican chairman of the congressional judiciary committee, last month sent a letter summoning Grant to appear before the committee.
He issued the summons after Grant spoke at a Stanford University panel, which he claimed “sought to facilitate cooperation with global censorship by bringing together foreign officials who have directly targeted American speech”.
The letter described Grant as “a primary enforcer of Australia’s OSA [Online Safety Act] and noted zealot for global takedowns”.
At Senate estimates on Tuesday, Grant said she would be sending a letter to Jordan “explaining a few things” without confirming if she would appear before the committee.

“My passion lies in safeguarding children on the internet,” stated Communications Minister Anika Wells emphatically.

As new regulations requiring social media users to be over the age of 16 come into effect, there are concerns that young users might find ways to circumvent these rules. However, the Labor government is putting technology companies on alert as the implementation deadline nears.

“We acknowledge that the rollout won’t be flawless from the start, but we remain committed to this cause and will not let tech platforms evade responsibility,” Wells assured.

The world-leading age restrictions come into effect next Wednesday, with children set to be kicked off popular platforms including Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat and TikTok.
A week out from the ban’s start date, Communications Minister Anika Wells will address the National Press Club in Canberra, acknowledging clever kids will find a way to get around the rules.
“Yes, there will still be kids with accounts on 10 December, and probably for some time after that,” she will say.
“But our expectation is clear: any company that allows this is breaking the law.

During her address at the National Press Club, Minister Wells expressed her expectation that some children might attempt to bypass the age restrictions, but reiterated the government’s determination to uphold the new guidelines.

A white woman with brown hair speaking at a press conference.

In a speech to the National Press Club, Communications Minister Anika Wells says she expects some children will get around the ban. Source: AAP / Lukas Coch

The communications minister will point to almost 86 per cent of Australian children between the ages of eight and 15 being on social media.

“We accept it will take time for the age assurance sieve to filter out the existing accounts and stop new accounts from being created,” she will say.

Meta to begin removing underage accounts

Meta will start booting children off its platforms — which include Instagram and Facebook — from Thursday.
Users wrongly identified will be able to verify their age with third-party platform Yoti or provide government-issued ID.
Several other platforms are using similar methods, but TikTok is yet to reveal what its appeal process will be.

The day after the ban is implemented, the eSafety commissioner will send notices to the 10 platforms named in their “dynamic list”.

These notices will ask for evidence, such as how many underage accounts the platforms had before the law started, and then after its implementation.
Tech companies face fines of up to $49.5 million if they fail to take “reasonable steps” to block young users from the cut-off date under the new laws.
“Those platforms will have time to reply, before the next round of information requests are sent out asking for updated figures every month for six months,” the minister will say.
Platforms must implement age-assurance technology, but a specific type or method has not been mandated by the eSafety Commission.
The government has flagged the list of platforms could grow to capture more under the ban.
— With reporting by the Australian Associated Press.

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