Australian teenagers have taken legal action to stop a social media ban for children under 16, filing a constitutional challenge just weeks before the law takes effect.
A campaign group, the Digital Freedom Project, announced this in a statement on Wednesday, November 26, 2025.
The group said it launched proceedings in the High Court of Australia in a bid to block the law, with two 15-year-olds, Noah Jones and Macy Neyland, as plaintiffs in the case.
Under the new law — scheduled to begin on December 10 — more than one million accounts belonging to users under 16 will be deactivated across platforms such as YouTube, TikTok, Snapchat, Facebook, and Instagram.
The Digital Freedom Project said the ban “robs” young Australians of their freedom of political communication, an implied right in the constitution. Australia does not have an express right to free speech.
“The legislation is grossly excessive,” it said.
Neyland noted that the law would ban young people from expressing their views online, saying: “Young people like me are the voters of tomorrow, we shouldn’t be silenced. It’s like Orwell’s book 1984, and that scares me.”
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The Digital Freedom Project’s president is John Ruddick, a member of the Libertarian Party in the New South Wales state Parliament.
After news of the legal challenge broke, Communications Minister Anika Wells told Parliament the centre-left government, led by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, would not be intimidated by threats and legal challenges.
“Despite the fact that we are receiving threats and legal challenges by people with ulterior motives, the Albanese Labor government remains steadfastly on the side of parents, and not of platforms,” Wells told Reuters.
Australian media has reported that YouTube also threatened to launch a High Court challenge on the grounds the ban burdened political communication.
Governments and tech firms around the world are closely watching Australia’s effort to implement the ban, one of the most comprehensive efforts to police minors’ social media access.
The ban was passed into law in November 2024 and is supported by the majority of Australians, according to opinion polling.
The government said research showed the over-use of social media was harming young teens, including causing misinformation, enabling bullying and harmful depictions of body image.
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