Deep search
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Real Estate
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
NFL
U.S.
2024 Election
Local
World
Science
Technology
AI
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Trending on Bing
Commuting 1,500 sentences
FBI director resigning
Biden's nominee rejected
On Iran 'mothership' claim
Director of Voice of America
Meta donates $1M to Trump
NZ reverses visa refusal
Taliban minister killed
Hit by cyberattack
AZ sues over water pumping
Vows to 'fight to the end'
Alexander brothers arrested
Granola bars recalled
House approves defense bill
US asks court to reject bid
Former US Rep. Leach dies
Time's Person of the Year
Storm slams East Coast
Class action to proceed
UNC hires Bill Belichick
Testifies at House hearing
Nasdaq diversity rules axed
How to catch the Geminids
Franklin Fire rages
TPG co-founder dies at 82
Wholesale inflation surged
Invites Xi to inauguration
Jobless claims rise to 242K
To stream live on Hulu
Undergoes second procedure
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
I'd consider Australia-style ban on social media for teens
Why Australia's social media ban impacts global marketers
With Australia set to ban social media for under-16s next year, the digital landscape faces a seismic shift. As younger audiences move offline and platform trust erodes, marketers must fundamentally rethink their approach to reaching consumers, argues Veridooh co-CEO Mo Moubayed.
I'm a dad in Australia. I'm worried about the way the social media ban will affect my 14-year-old.
An Australian dad says his son uses TikTok to find new music, Snapchat to keep up with friends, and Signal to communicate with his grandparents.
Australia is about to ban social media for anyone under 16; how it will work
The law would fine social media platforms like TikTok, Facebook, X, and Instagram for failing to stop children younger than 16 years old from having accounts.
Australia to charge tech companies for news content
Australia to charge tech companies for news content if they do not pay
Australia's centre-left government said on Thursday it planned new rules that would charge big tech firms millions of dollars if they did not pay Australian media companies for news hosted on their platforms.
Australia demands big social platforms pay local news publishers
Australia is not messing around when it comes to big tech. Last month the country introduced a law that, if passed, would ban all people 16 and younger from social media. Now, its coming after social media and search engines alike,
Australia plans to tax digital platforms that don't pay for news
The Australian government said Thursday it will tax large digital platforms and search engines unless they agree to share revenue with Australian news media organizations. The tax would apply from Jan.
3h
After Australia, Sweden plans to ‘ban’ social media usage for teens: All the details
Swedish ministers are considering imposing age restrictions on social media platforms such as Facebook and Instagram, given ...
2d
Australia becomes first to ban children under 16 from having social media
The law will make platforms including TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat, Reddit, X and Instagram liable for fines of up to $33 ...
2d
on MSN
Betweened founder Carla Engelbrecht on regulating social media for kids
Carla Engelbrecht, Betweened founder, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Australia's social media ban for children under 16 starting next year, how to best protect kids online, and more.
5d
Australia's incoming under-16 social media ban cannot be considered overreach when minors also can't gamble, drive cars or vote in elections
The Australian Parliament’s decision to set the minimum age for making social media profiles at 16 isn’t just a legislative ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results
Feedback