Parents of teens to control access to AI chatbots
Oct 20, 2025
Washington [US], October 20: The countdown to Australia's world-leading social media ban for children is on, with artificial intelligence chatbots potentially in the crosshairs as regulators, parents, educators and platforms prepare for the upcoming rule changes.
From December 10, companies must take reasonable steps to find underage users and stop under-16s accessing social platforms and provide users an accessible complaints process.
Tech giants face fines of up to $50 million if they do not comply.
Meta, the company founded and led by Mark Zuckerberg, which owns platforms Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger and Threads, will introduce artificial intelligence (AI) supervision tools for parents in early 2026.
Parents will be able to turn off their children's access to one-on-one chats with AI characters on Meta's platforms, set time limits for interactions and see what topics they are chatting to the bots about.
The changes will be rolled out to the United States, England, Canada and Australia.
AI chatbots were "supercharging" the problem of bullying, Education Minister Jason Clare said.
Meta previously announced it had updated AI experiences for teens to be guided by the PG-13 movie rating system to prevent minors from accessing inappropriate content.Meta will also implement changes on Instagram to restrict content for users aged from 13 to 17 in line with PG-13 ratings.
Although it will come into effect ahead of Australia's social media ban for under-16s, the company said the change had not been implemented due to the looming restrictions.
Source: Fijian Broadcasting Cooperation