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Australia

Australia pitches social media age ban to world leaders

25 September 2025 03:30 | News

Australia’s first social media age ban in the world is promoted to other nations during the last day full of jam in the United Nations General Assembly.

Anthony Albanese is trying to establish an international coalition to shorten the access of children’s access to applications such as Instagram, Tiktok and Snapchat.

He joined the parents who campaign for more challenging social media laws at an event for world leaders in New York.

“It’s not just a limited thing to Australia, Ant Anthony says Albanian. (Lukas Coch/AAP Photos)

On the last day in the United States, Albania will address the United Nations again, meet Sri Lanka colleague, talk in two climatic incidents and will potentially sit with Türkiye’s strong leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

“This will be a really important meeting, Al Albanese said the social media event.

“The globe is looking at it, and it is not limited to Australia,” he said to journalists in New York at the beginning of the week.

Europe is considering bringing similar laws to barricading children under 16 years of age.

Tiktok stock
The use of social media can be discussed by Anthony Arbanese and Donald Trump when they meet in October. (Morgan Hancock/AAP Photos)

However, Australia’s age restrictions can cause friction with the US, on which many major online platforms are based.

The White House expressed the concerns of other laws that prevent technology giants from using the Australian news content.

The problem can be discussed when Mr. Albania sits with US President Donald Trump and returned for months and forth for months.

Oval office talks were announced after Mr. Albania met with the president at a reception for world leaders on Wednesday.

The couple posed for a selfie published by Mr. Albanese on social media.

Mark Watson, a senior member of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said that the meeting in October would be important but potentially risky against other world leaders during the White House talks.

AAP said, “Something else would be successful than the humiliation below,” AAP said.

Watson, who spent 33 years at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, including the US Embassy in Australia, said that the Prime Minister would probably seek assurance from Mr. Trump about the Aukus nuclear submarine agreement.

The United States reviews the three -country agreement containing Britain to ensure that Mr. Trump is in line with the “American first” agenda.


AAP News

Australian Associated Press is a beating heart of Australian news. AAP has been the only independent national Newswire of Australia and has been providing reliable and fast news content to the media industry, the government and the corporate sector for 85 years. We inform Australia.

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