TikTok and YouTube delete 4.7 million child accounts in Indonesia

Social media companies TikTok and YouTube have deactivated a total of around 4.7 million accounts belonging ​to children under the age of 16 in Indonesia, ‌the country’s communications minister said, as its social media curbs began to take effect.

Here are the details:

  • TikTok, developed by Chinese technology company ​ByteDance, has deactivated 4.1 million accounts, while Alphabet’s Google’s ​video platform YouTube has deactivated 600,000 accounts, Communications and ⁠Digital Minister Meutya Hafid said late on Thursday, adding that ​the ministry wanted others to follow.
  • Neither company responded immediately ​to a request for comment.
  • In March, Indonesia issued a regulation which requires social media companies with platforms it deems high risk to ​deactivate accounts belonging to children under 16, which have ​so far included X, Meta’s Instagram and videogame platform Roblox.
  • “We’re not just ‌delaying ⁠a child’s access, but we want behaviours from platforms to change, too,” Meutya said on Thursday, adding that the ministry is currently checking self-assessment reports by the companies.
  • Indonesia’s ​curbs, which the ​government says ⁠are intended to reduce the risk of cyberbullying and addiction, follow a ban in ​Australia last year over concerns about the ​potential harm social ⁠media poses to the mental health of young people.
  • Australia’s groundbreaking experiment is being closely watched, with countries around the world seeking to ⁠emulate ​it amid concerns about the mental ​and physical health of minors.
  • Britain announced this month that it planned wider restrictions that include gaming ​and live-streaming platforms.

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