HEADLINES

Malaysia to use a different model from Australia in enforcing social media ban for under 16s: Fahmi

Communications Minister says user verification will be done using government-issued documents

10:55 AM MYT

 

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia will use a different mechanism from Australia in enforcing the social media ban for children under 16, said Communications Minister Datuk Fahmi Fadzil.

He said Malaysia prefers a platform-proposed age verification mechanism, describing it as more practical, enforceable and privacy-protective than Australia’s “age assurance” approach.

According to him, Facebook has formally offered to assist with verification using government-issued documents.

“I received a letter from the Facebook Regional Director stating openly and officially that Facebook is prepared to help with user verification using government-issued documents.

“The idea did not come from me. It came from Facebook, and I would like to thank Dr Raphael Frankel for proposing it. We will likely take that path,” Fahmi said in an interview with Bernama.

Fahmi added that beginning January 1, the government will roll out a regulatory sandbox involving the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) and selected social media platforms to assess child-protection mechanisms in a controlled environment.

The sandbox will allow regulators and platforms to evaluate risks, test enforcement capability and fine-tune technical and operational requirements before full implementation. Fahmi said the trial will run for several months to ensure safeguards are effective and cannot be easily bypassed.

He stressed that the approach is not about simply issuing directives, but about aligning government policy with platform capability to ensure meaningful protection. If one method proves unsuitable, Malaysia will consider alternatives before enforcement.

Fahmi added that while Malaysia is learning from Australia, Denmark and others, its policy and implementation will be tailored to local realities, with a strong emphasis on user privacy and children’s online safety.

It was previously reported that Malaysia will prohibit children aged 16 and below from having their own social media accounts from next year, to protect them from online harm.

Australia recently became the first country in the world to enforce a social media ban for children under 16, with the legislation officially coming into force on Wednesday, December 10.— December 27, 2025

Topics

 

Popular

Duck and cover? FashionValet bought Vivy’s 30 Maple for RM95 mil in 2018

Purchase of Duck's holding company which appears to be owned wholly by Datin Vivy Yusof and husband Datuk Fadzarudin Shah Anuar was made same year GLICs invested RM47 mil

Petronas staff to be shown the door to make up losses from Petros deal?

Source claims national O&G firm is expected to see 30% revenue loss once agreed formula for natural gas distribution in Sarawak is implemented

Apad confirms inDrive licence revoked effective July 24, but company can appeal

Russian-based company can file appeal through the agency for the Transport Ministry's consideration

Related