Description
Instagram is making changes to how teenagers use the social media platform, applying limits to the content they see and who can get in touch with them.
It’s a first for a social media giant as concern grows about the harmful content children are exposed to online.
The announcement comes as the federal government works on an outright ban of social media for children.
The precise age limit is still to be settled, South Australia thinks under-14 is appropriate, but any ban is likely to require some form of age verification.
Today, tech reporter Ange Lavoipierre on what all of us might have to give up to prove our age.
Ange discusses the implications of the Instagram changes, highlighting the automatic privacy settings for teen accounts and the introduction of a “sleep mode” to limit screen time.
Featured:
Ange Lavoipierre, ABC national technology reporter
Key Topics:
Instagram teen accounts
Social media age verification
Online safety for teenagers
AI tools for age detection
Privacy concerns in social media
Albanese government social media ban
Screen time limits
Parental controls on social media
Harmful online content
Social media regulations for children
We want to hear from you; how can we make our podcast even better? Please take a few minutes to complete our listener survey. Find the link on the ABC News Daily website.
Thousands of us travel through South East Asia every year and it can, at times, be risky.
But the story out of Laos this...
Published 11/21/24
We want to hear from you; how can we make our podcast even better? Please take a few minutes to complete our listener survey. Find the link on the ABC News Daily website.
On the one thousandth day of Russia’s war in Ukraine this week there was a major shift on the battleground.
Russia...
Published 11/20/24