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Reddit Challenges Australia’s Social Media Ban In High Court

The lawsuit is the second such challenge after two teenagers representing an Australian libertarian group filed suit last month following the rollout of the world-first nationwide ban on people under 16 accessing social media. 

Reddit, a message board website, on Friday filed a lawsuit in Australia’s highest court seeking to overturn the country’s social media ban for children, calling it an intrusion on free political discourse and setting the stage for a protracted legal battle.

Backlash Against the Ban 

The San Francisco-based firm, which ranks Australia among its biggest markets, said in a High Court filing that the ban should be declared invalid because it interfered with free political communication implied by the country’s constitution.

Even if the court upheld the ban, Reddit should be exempt since it did not meet the definition of social media, added the filing, which named the Commonwealth of Australia and Communications Minister Anika Wells as defendants.

The lawsuit is the second such challenge after two teenagers representing an Australian libertarian group filed suit last month following the rollout of the world-first nationwide ban on people under 16 accessing social media. 

But the action from a Silicon Valley major with a $44 billion market capitalisation dramatically increases the resources available to continue a drawn-out court battle. Success for Reddit could open the door for other platforms to mount similar challenges.

‘Privacy And Political Expression’

Australia went live with the world’s first legally enforced age minimum to access social media on December 10. Reddit and nine other platforms, including Meta’s Instagram, Alphabet’s YouTube and TikTok campaigned against the measure for more than a year before ultimately saying they would comply.

The platforms are required to bar underage users or face a fine of up to A$49.5 million ($33 million), while underage users and their caregivers do not face punishment. 

The law “carries some serious privacy and political expression issues for everyone on the internet,” Reddit said in a statement published alongside its court filing. “So, we are filing an application to have the law reviewed.”

In the 12-page filing, the company said barring under-16s would impede political discourse.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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