Parliament passed the legislation on November 29, 2024, following endorsement by Australia's National Cabinet in early November. The government operates the law through a "dynamic list" mechanism, allowing it to add platforms as technology evolves. What remains unclear is whether the measure will achieve its stated goal of reducing online harms. Only two months of data exist on the ban's actual effects on young people's wellbeing and digital literacy.
The ban signals a significant global shift away from consent-based privacy models toward outright age-based access restrictions. Attorneys should monitor whether other jurisdictions adopt similar frameworks and how courts address inevitable challenges to age verification methods and their privacy implications. The law also raises questions about enforcement against platforms operating internationally and whether structural restrictions on access address the underlying design problems—algorithmic engagement, misinformation, addictive features—that affect all users regardless of age.