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Australian Government Introduces New Social Media Rules for Teens

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On September 16, 2025, the Australian government announced that starting December 10, it will implement the world’s first social media ban for those under 16. The policy will cover major platforms including Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), and YouTube, with only controlled versions such as YouTube Kids remaining accessible. The government stated that the measure aims to protect teenagers from harmful content, reduce potential mental health risks, and create a safer online environment.

To enforce the policy, platforms must implement multiple safeguards, including credit card verification, facial age estimation, digital identity verification, or government document checks, to prevent bypassing through self-reported ages. Platforms must also provide an appeals mechanism for wrongly blocked users and regularly audit their verification systems, submitting compliance reports to the government. The government emphasized that this is not merely regulation but aims to encourage companies to proactively improve age verification and content moderation systems. Noncompliance could result in fines up to AUD 50 million and restrictions on advertising revenue and services in Australia.

Mental health experts note that prolonged social media use can increase loneliness, anxiety, sleep deprivation, and lowered self-esteem among teenagers. The government believes the policy will reduce teenagers’ exposure to inappropriate content while urging parents to guide healthy online usage. Social media companies expressed partial support but also warned the government to provide clear guidance and technical support to avoid mistakenly blocking legitimate users and recommended a transition period for gradual adaptation.

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NDIS Plans to Be Computer-Generated

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Australia’s National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) will undergo major reforms in mid-2026, with participants’ funding packages and support plans to be generated by computer programs, leaving staff with no discretion to alter them.

The new model, known as the I-CAN Planning Tool (Instrument for Classification and Assessment of Support Needs, Version 6.0), was developed by the University of Melbourne and the Centre for Disability Studies, and has been used in Australia’s disability sector for the past 20 years. The National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA) says the tool will improve plan consistency, reduce human error, and cut the cost and time participants spend gathering medical evidence.

Under the new system, the Administrative Review Tribunal (ART) will no longer be able to directly amend plans; instead, it can only send a plan back to the NDIA for reassessment. Assessors will be Level 6 employees in the Australian Public Service. Initially, assessors will be hired internally by the NDIA, and although backgrounds in allied health or lived disability experience will be considered an advantage, they are not required.

The new assessment process includes a semi-structured conversational interview and a questionnaire. When needed, targeted specialist assessments will be conducted—for example, for home modifications, assistive technology, or hospitalisation/compensation-related factors. The NDIA says delegates will be responsible for confirming whether the computer-generated plan meets a participant’s needs.

The reform will significantly reduce human involvement in plan creation and will change the appeals process. The NDIA emphasises that participants can still request a reassessment, and if they remain dissatisfied, they may appeal to the ART. However, third parties will not be allowed to intervene in the assessment process.

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Victorian Government U-Turns, to Criminalize “Coercive Control”

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The Victorian government has announced it will introduce a standalone criminal offence for “coercive control” in 2026, marking a major policy reversal. Previously, the Labor government led by Premier Jacinta Allan maintained that existing family violence laws already covered coercive control and rejected opposition proposals to legislate specifically on the issue.

Last week, newly appointed opposition leader Jess Wilson made creating a coercive control offence her first commitment for the 2026 state election, promising that if the Coalition wins, the law would be introduced within her first 100 days in office. After the Liberals submitted bills to both houses of the state parliament this week, the government shifted its stance. Attorney-General Sonya Kilkenny acknowledged that “more must be done,” admitting that current laws remain insufficient to protect victims.

The government emphasized it will roll out its own legislative version in 2026, but the process will involve thorough consultation to avoid unintended legal consequences. Although Labor voted against the Liberal bill in the lower house, it supported a separate Liberal motion in the upper house to “expedite” coercive control laws.

Coercive control involves behaviors such as isolation, monitoring, gaslighting, and economic control, typically perpetrated by male offenders against female partners.

The government is also advancing another family violence reform, including setting a two-year minimum term for intervention orders, ensuring protection continues for children after they turn 18, and expanding the definition of family violence to include stalking, systemic abuse, and animal cruelty.

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Victoria Police Admit Eight Years of Illegal Weapons Searches

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Victoria Police recently admitted that over the past eight years, many of their weapons searches did not comply with legal procedures. Internal audits found at least 23 searches were illegal, potentially affecting hundreds of people, with 33 already prosecuted or fined.

The illegal actions were mainly administrative oversights, such as failing to publish required government notices or conducting searches outside designated times or events. Police emphasized that most of the approximately 200 searches over the eight years were still lawful. Affected individuals are being notified and assisted in appealing fines if applicable. The matter has been reported to the Independent Broad‑based Anti‑corruption Commission (IBAC), and police said they will strengthen internal procedures.

Critics warned that non-compliant operations highlight excessive police powers, lack of accountability, and risks to vulnerable groups, calling for stricter regulation and oversight of police “designated area search powers.”

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