Here's a way to upset millions of teenagers: tell them they can't use YouTube anymore. That's exactly what's about to happen in Australia, where Alphabet Inc.'s (GOOG) Google announced Tuesday that anyone under 16 will be automatically logged out of their YouTube accounts on December 10.
Why YouTube Is Pulling the Plug on Teen Accounts
The mass logout isn't YouTube's idea. Australia's Social Media Minimum Age Act is forcing the company's hand, requiring platforms to take "reasonable steps" to prevent under-16s from maintaining accounts. Both viewers and creators will lose access until they hit the magic age of 16.
Rachel Lord, Google and YouTube Australia's senior public policy manager, made it clear the company isn't happy about this. In a blog post, she explained that YouTube is complying with the law despite actively opposing being included in the crackdown.
The company's argument? Forcing teens off their accounts will actually backfire. "This is a disappointing update to share.... We have consistently said, this rushed regulation misunderstands our platform and the way young Australians use it. Most importantly, this law will not fulfill its promise to make kids safer online, and will, in fact, make Australian kids less safe on YouTube," Lord wrote.
The logic goes like this: when teens are signed into accounts, YouTube can track what they watch, filter content, apply age-appropriate restrictions, and use parental controls. Boot them out, and they're just anonymous viewers with none of those protections. Whether you buy that argument probably depends on how much you trust tech companies to prioritize safety over engagement.
Who's Affected and Who Gets a Pass
The Australian law casts a wide net. It targets Meta Platforms Inc. (META)'s Facebook and Instagram, ByteDance's TikTok, Snap Inc.'s (SNAP) Snapchat, Reddit Inc. (RDDT), X, Twitch, and YouTube. Platforms face requirements to implement age verification measures to keep underage users out.
But not every platform made the list. Australia's eSafety Commissioner carved out exemptions for services deemed less risky or serving different purposes. Discord, Roblox, WhatsApp, Google Classroom, Pinterest (PINS), Microsoft Corp's (MSFT) GitHub, and YouTube Kids all escaped the ban. The distinction seems to hinge on whether a service primarily functions as social media or serves other purposes like education, messaging, or gaming.
A Regional Trend Emerges
Australia isn't alone in rethinking how young people access social media. Earlier this month, Malaysia announced it's raising its minimum age for social media accounts to 16 starting next year. The Malaysian approach goes even further, requiring platforms to verify users' identities through eKYC checks using official documents as part of its Online Safety Act, which takes effect January 1, 2026.
The trend signals growing frustration among governments trying to figure out how to protect young people online without completely disconnecting them from digital life. Whether forcing teens to lie about their age or watch content without any personalization actually makes them safer remains an open question.
For now, Australian teenagers have less than a week before YouTube shows them the door. And tech platforms are watching closely to see whether this experiment spreads beyond the Asia-Pacific region.