Australia is giving the internet industry six months to come up with an enforceable code detailing how it will stop children seeing pornography and other inappropriate material online or face having a code imposed on it, a regulator said. More here: https://t.co/69Bm1GvBYZ
Australia is giving the internet industry six months to come up with an enforceable code detailing how it will stop children seeing pornography and other inappropriate material online or face having a code imposed on it, a regulator said https://t.co/rhQEONAluk
New Zealand's conservative coalition government will proceed with a bill that would make it compulsory for digital technology platforms to pay media companies for news, it said https://t.co/9tvCtc7IlT


Australia is implementing new measures to protect children from online pornography and inappropriate material. The eSafety Commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, has set a six-month deadline for social media giants, including Meta, and internet firms to draft an enforceable code to prevent children from accessing such content. If the industry fails to comply, a code will be imposed by the regulator. This initiative includes a trial of age check technology that will block children from both social media and porn sites. These measures are part of Australia's broader effort to establish online child safety rules.