Meta, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube aren't fully complying with child account ban, Australia says

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australia'sonline safety watchdogsaid Tuesday it was considering court against Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube alleging they are not doing enough to keep Australian children younger than 16 off their platforms.

Associated Press FILE - A YouTube sign is shown near the company's headquarters in San Bruno, Calif., Wednesday, March 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu, file) FILE - A car passes Facebook's new Meta logo on a sign at the company headquarters on Oct. 28, 2021, in Menlo Park, Calif. (AP Photo/Tony Avelar, File)

Social Media Kids Trial

Experts say the Australian courts could decide what steps the platforms can reasonably be expected to take underthe lawsthat took effect on Dec. 10 banning young children from holding accounts.

eSAfety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant on Tuesday released her first compliance report since those laws took effect demanding 10 platforms remove all Australian account-holders younger than 16.

While 5 million Australian accounts had been deactivated, a substantial number of Australian children continued to retain accounts, create new accounts and pass platforms' age assurance systems, the report said.

Inman Grant said in a statement her office had "significant concerns about the compliance" of half of those 10 platforms. Her office was gathering evidence against the five that they had not taken "reasonable steps" to prevent young children holding accounts.

Courts could order fines of up to 49.5 million Australian dollars ($33 million) for systemic failures to comply. eSafety would decide on whether to initiate court action against any platform by midyear.

Age-restricted platformsthat aren't under investigation are Reddit, X, Kick, Threads and Twitch.

Communications Minister Anika Wells said the five criticized platforms were deliberately not complying with Australian law.

"Social media platforms are choosing to do the absolute bare minimum because they want these laws to fail," Wells told reporters.

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"This is the world-leading law. We're the first in the world to do it. Of course they don't want these laws to work because they want that to be a chilling effect on the dozen countries that have come out since Dec. 10 to follow Australia's step," she added.

eSafety had identified "poor practices" such as platforms allowing unlimited attempts for a user to pass their age assurance methods and prompting the user to try to pass the age assurance method even after they declared themselves underage.

Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, told The Associated Press it was committed to complying with Australia's social media ban. "We've also been clear that accurately determining age online is a challenge for the whole industry," the statement said.

Snap Inc. said it has locked 450,000 accounts in compliance with the law and continued to lock more every day.

"Snapchat remains fully committed to implementing reasonable steps under the legislation and supporting its underlying goal of improving online safety for young Australians," a Snap statement said.

TikTok declined to comment on Tuesday and Alphabet Inc., which owns YouTube and Google, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Lisa Given, an information sciences expert at RMIT University in Melbourne, said she expected the courts will decide whether platforms have taken "reasonable steps" to exclude young children.

"If a tech company has said: look, we put in age assurance, we've done all these steps. That's reasonable. Even though the aged assurance technologies are flawed, whose fault is that? Should they be held accountable for a piece of technology that is not 100% and likely not going to be 100% foolproof any time soon?" Given said.

"That's really the crux of it: what the courts will deem reasonable," she added.

Meta, Snapchat, TikTok and YouTube aren't fully complying with child account ban, Australia says

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Australia'sonline safety watchdogsaid Tuesday it was considering court against Facebook,...
Tiger Woods doesn't belong anywhere near the Ryder Cup in 2027

In the wake of hisFriday afternoon wreck and DUI arrest in Florida, Tiger Woods faces massive challenges in both his personal and professional lives. One challenge he shouldn't face: the question of whether he should captain the Ryder Cup team.

Yahoo Sports

Yes, at a time like this, when Woods is facing literal jail time after his arrest on suspicion of DUI, the question ofHow This Will Affect Golfis borderline irrelevant. But it's a critical question nevertheless, because the sway that Woods has held over the sport of golf, and the way that the sport of golf has sheltered Woods, are key factors that led to Friday's rollover accident.

Quite simply, Woods is not fit to spend the next 18 months as the face of the United States Ryder Cup team. Whether you think Woods has disgraced himself, endangered himself, or merely embarrassed himself, the end result is the same. This is a man who should be working on himself and his life, not drawing up potential pairings for a Friday fourball session.

Sure, this upends what had been a long-term succession plan … but that's what wrecks tend to do.

For roughly two decades now, conventional wisdom has held that Woods would eventually become a Ryder Cup captain, as virtually all American and European greats of the game eventually do. (Of course, conventional wisdom also held that Phil Mickelson would one day captain the United States, and that now seems about as likely as you or me getting the call.)

Woods was asked to captain the 2025 team. He declined, citing the demands on his time presented by his role as a leading member of the PGA Tour's Player Advisory Council. The job went to Keegan Bradley instead, and, well,we saw how that turned out.

Earlier this year, Woods revealed that the PGA of America had reached out to him about the captaincy, but was characteristically evasive about specifics: "They have asked me for my input on it, and I haven't made my decision yet," hesaid at the Genesis Invitationalin February.

Since then, he's made his decision — or, more accurately, made other decisions that should foreclose this one.

STUART, FLORIDA - MARCH 27: Tiger Woods is driven from the Martin County Jail after being arrested for driving under the influence after a car crash on March 27, 2026 in Stuart, Florida. The Martin County Sheriff's Office said that Woods and the other driver involved in the two-car crash in Jupiter Island, Florida, were not injured. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Let's put aside the very real question of whether Woods would even make a good captain from a strategic perspective. Woods played in eight Ryder Cups from 1997 to 2018, amassing an all-time record of 13-21-3. As a member of a team, he was just 9-19-1, and the U.S. as a whole was only 1-7 when he was on the roster. Team sports weren't really Tiger's bag, and "played good golf once" isn't the only barometer for whether a player will transition into being a great captain.

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What does make a great captain? There are two philosophies.

The first is to treat it like a fantasy football team owner, running out pairings of the best players and letting them do their thing, throwing in a little pep talk every now and then via golf cart. This has been the Americans' usual strategy in this century. It's been uneven at best.

The second is to micromanage every element of the Ryder Cup experience, from the order of events to the length of the rough, from the pre-match party schedule to the shampoo in players' rooms. This has been Luke Donald's style, and it's a key reason why the Europeans have throttled the U.S. in so many recent Ryder Cups.

Right now, Woods definitely isn't a fit from an optics perspective and, considering the issues he has outside the ropes, not from a procedural one, either.

The margins for Ryder Cup victory are so slim that the tiniest edges matter. At the celebratory post-Ryder press conference last year, Donald told the story of how he ensured that light from the outside hallway wouldn't shine under players' hotel room doors so that they could get their sleep. Obsessive? Unnecessary? Maybe, but who's to argue with results?

Perhaps Woods could have devoted the necessary time to the American Ryder Cup effort to match Donald's. Perhaps he could have pored over data and statistics, forecasts and catering menus to give the United States the best possible chance of winning on foreign soil. But even before his wreck, it sure didn't seem like Woods had that kind of time.

"I'm trying to figure out what we're trying to do with our tour," Woods said in February. "That's been driving me hours upon hours every day and trying to figure out if I can actually do our team, our Team USA and our players and everyone that's going to be involved in the Ryder Cup, if I can do it justice with my time. Serving on two boards, and what I'm doing for the PGA Tour, I'm trying to figure out if I can actually do this and serve the people that are involved and serve them at an honorable level."

Which brings us back to the second half of the equation: the optics of hiring a clearly struggling Woods as the face of the United States' Ryder Cup endeavors. Regardless of whetherWoods is able to avoid legal recriminations arising from his wreck, the fact remains that this isn't the first time Woods has been in a serious incident involving a motor vehicle. It's a borderline miracle that Woods has only harmed himself — plus a fire hydrant and several vehicles — in his publicly known auto accidents.

Even the most generous reading of Woods' situation is that of a man not fully in control of his own life right now. The best thing the PGA of America could do for Woods would be to remove his name from consideration for the Ryder Cup captaincy and — privately if necessary — encourage him to get the help he needs to get his life back on track. This is the ultimate bigger-than-golf moment, and Woods clearly needs all the help he can get, even if he's not willing to ask for it himself.

Tiger Woods has plenty of opportunities left to captain the United States Ryder Cup team, but 2027 shouldn't be one of them.

Tiger Woods doesn't belong anywhere near the Ryder Cup in 2027

In the wake of hisFriday afternoon wreck and DUI arrest in Florida, Tiger Woods faces massive challenges in both his per...
Bulls waive Jaden Ivey after troubling social media messages

The Chicago Bulls waived fourth-year guard Jaden Ivey on Monday for "conduct detrimental to the team."

Field Level Media

The Bulls' decision came shortly after Ivey, the fifth overall selection of the 2022 NBA Draft, published several videos on social media that expressed his disapproval of the league's Pride Month activities from a religious perspective.

Perhaps just as troubling, the 24-year-old guard's tone and cadence in his videos sounded distracted or off-kilter.

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"That the world can proclaim LBGTQ," Ivey said while appearing to be driving a car during one snippet. "Right?"

"They proclaim Pride Month and the NBA, they proclaim it. They show it to the world. They say come, come, uh, come join us for Pride. For Pride Month. To celebrate unrighteousness. They proclaim it. They proclaim it on the billboards. They proclaim it in the streets. Unrighteousness. So how is it that one can't, can't speak righteousness? How are they to say that, uh, you, you, 'Man, this man is crazy.'"

Ivey averaged 14.9 points, 3.5 rebounds and 4.0 assists while shooting 35.4% from 3-point range in 3 1/2 seasons for the Detroit Pistons. The Bulls acquired the Purdue alum in a trade on Feb. 3, but Ivey appeared in just four games before being shut down due to left knee issues.

--Field Level Media

Bulls waive Jaden Ivey after troubling social media messages

The Chicago Bulls waived fourth-year guard Jaden Ivey on Monday for "conduct detrimental to the team." ...

 

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