Malaysia bars under-16s from owning social media accounts
Malaysia has implemented new rules that prohibit children under 16 from owning social media accounts. This regulation became effective on Monday, impacting millions of young users. The government's action is part of a broader online safety initiative.
Key Takeaways
- The new rule bans children under 16 from owning social media accounts in Malaysia.
- Enforcement began on Monday, according to the article.
- The policy affects millions of young users.
- The government framed the move as part of a broader online safety initiative.
Why It Matters
Malaysia’s enforcement immediately changes who can hold social media accounts in the country: children under 16 are now barred from owning them. For the streaming and digital media ecosystem, it is another example of governments tightening age-related access rules around online services, even though this article only specifies social media accounts. The key signal to watch next is whether Malaysia publishes additional implementation details, such as how platforms will verify age for under-16 users.
Read full article at cebudailynews.inquirer.net
