Meta and TikTok to Obey Australia Under-16 Social Media Ban

TikTok said Australia's looming social media ban could force children into darker corners of the internet. Patrick T. Fallon / AFP
TikTok said Australia's looming social media ban could force children into darker corners of the internet. Patrick T. Fallon / AFP
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Meta and TikTok to Obey Australia Under-16 Social Media Ban

TikTok said Australia's looming social media ban could force children into darker corners of the internet. Patrick T. Fallon / AFP
TikTok said Australia's looming social media ban could force children into darker corners of the internet. Patrick T. Fallon / AFP

Tech giants Meta and TikTok said Tuesday they will obey Australia's under-16 social media ban but warned the landmark laws could prove difficult to enforce.

Australia will from December 10 force social media platforms such as Facebook, Instagram and TikTok to remove users under the age of 16, said AFP.

There is keen interest in whether Australia's sweeping restrictions can work, as regulators around the globe wrestle with the dangers of social media.

Both TikTok and Meta -- the parent company of Facebook and Instagram -- said the ban would be hard to police, but agreed they would abide by it.

"Put simply, TikTok will comply with the law and meet our legislative obligations," the firm's Australia policy lead Ella Woods-Joyce told a Senate hearing on Tuesday.

On paper, the ban is one of the strictest in the world.

But with just over a month until it comes into effect, Australia is scrambling to fill in key questions around enforcement and firms' obligations.

TikTok warned the "blunt" age ban could have a raft of unintended consequences.

"Experts believe a ban will push younger people into darker corners of the Internet where protections don't exist," said Woods-Joyce.

'Vague' and 'rushed'

Meta policy director Mia Garlick said the firm was still solving "numerous challenges".

It would work to remove hundreds of thousands of users under 16 by the December 10 deadline, she told the hearing.

But identifying and removing those accounts still posed "significant new engineering and age assurance challenges", she said.

"The goal from our perspective, being compliance with the law, would be to remove those under 16."

Officials have previously said social media companies will not be required to verify the ages of all users -- but must take "reasonable steps" to detect and deactivate underage ones.

Companies found to be flouting the laws face fines of up to Aus$49.5 million (US$32 million).

Tech companies have been united in their criticisms of Australia's ban, which has been described as "vague", "problematic", and "rushed".

Video streaming site YouTube - which falls under the ban -- said this month that Australia's efforts were well intentioned but poorly thought through.

"The legislation will not only be extremely difficult to enforce, it also does not fulfil its promise of making kids safer online," local spokeswoman Rachel Lord said.

Australia's online watchdog recently suggested that messaging service WhatsApp, streaming platform Twitch and gaming site Roblox could also be covered by the ban.



EU: Google Should Allow Third-party Search Engines Access to Data

FILE PHOTO: Google's logo during the CERAWeek energy conference 2026 in Houston, Texas, US, March 24, 2026. REUTERS/Danielle Villasana/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Google's logo during the CERAWeek energy conference 2026 in Houston, Texas, US, March 24, 2026. REUTERS/Danielle Villasana/File Photo
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EU: Google Should Allow Third-party Search Engines Access to Data

FILE PHOTO: Google's logo during the CERAWeek energy conference 2026 in Houston, Texas, US, March 24, 2026. REUTERS/Danielle Villasana/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Google's logo during the CERAWeek energy conference 2026 in Houston, Texas, US, March 24, 2026. REUTERS/Danielle Villasana/File Photo

The European Commission has sent preliminary findings to Google on proposed measures to comply with the EU's Digital Markets Act, which would allow third-party search engines to access Google search data, including ⁠that of artificial ⁠intelligence chatbots with search functionalities, the commission said on Thursday.

Interested parties have until May ⁠1 to submit their views on the proposed measures, with a final decision to be made in July.

Google, the world's most popular search engine, was charged in March 2025 with ⁠breaching ⁠the Digital Markets Act. It has made its own proposals to mollify rivals and EU regulators, but rivals have complained the measures were insufficient.


Samsung Asks Court to Block Illegal Strike Activities by Unions

A South Korean national flag (L) and a Samsung flag (R) flutter outside the company's Seocho building in Seoul on April 7, 2026. (Photo by Jung Yeon-je / AFP)
A South Korean national flag (L) and a Samsung flag (R) flutter outside the company's Seocho building in Seoul on April 7, 2026. (Photo by Jung Yeon-je / AFP)
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Samsung Asks Court to Block Illegal Strike Activities by Unions

A South Korean national flag (L) and a Samsung flag (R) flutter outside the company's Seocho building in Seoul on April 7, 2026. (Photo by Jung Yeon-je / AFP)
A South Korean national flag (L) and a Samsung flag (R) flutter outside the company's Seocho building in Seoul on April 7, 2026. (Photo by Jung Yeon-je / AFP)

Samsung Electronics asked a court on Thursday to block its South Korean labour unions engaging in illegal activities during a planned strike, a spokesperson said, as a wage dispute threatens to disrupt operations at the world's top memory chipmaker.

Samsung did not elaborate on details of its legal action. Unions labelled it a "declaration of war," accusing the company of infringing on its right to strike, which ⁠is protected under the ⁠law.

Unionized workers at Samsung last month voted to authorize strike plans and threatened to walk out for 18 days from May 21, should they fail to agree on a wage deal with management.

The unions also plan to ⁠hold a major rally on April 23, ramping up pressure on Samsung during wage negotiations.

Samsung workers, frustrated by a pay gap with crosstown rival SK Hynix, are calling on Samsung to remove its performance pay cap and link bonuses to operating profit.

The company estimated it made an operating profit of 57.2 trillion won ($38.85 billion) for the January to March period, more than an eightfold ⁠jump ⁠from 6.69 trillion won a year earlier.

Samsung's union leader told Reuters that a potential strike could affect about half the output at Samsung's giant semiconductor complex in Pyeongtaek, south of Seoul, the capital.

A strike at the world's largest manufacturer of memory chips could worsen bottlenecks in global supply of semiconductors, stemming from robust demand for artificial intelligence data center operations that has curbed supply to industries from cars and computers to smartphones.


AI Demand Drives Chipmaker TSMC's Net Profit to Fresh Record

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is displayed outside of TSMC Museum of Innovation in Hsinchu, Taiwan April 9, 2026. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is displayed outside of TSMC Museum of Innovation in Hsinchu, Taiwan April 9, 2026. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo
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AI Demand Drives Chipmaker TSMC's Net Profit to Fresh Record

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is displayed outside of TSMC Museum of Innovation in Hsinchu, Taiwan April 9, 2026. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is displayed outside of TSMC Museum of Innovation in Hsinchu, Taiwan April 9, 2026. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo

Taiwanese chip manufacturer TSMC said Thursday that net profit for January-March leaped to a fresh quarterly record, boosted by the race to develop artificial intelligence technology.

Massive global demand for AI hardware means business is booming for TSMC, the world's biggest contract maker of microchips used in everything from Apple phones to Nvidia's AI processors.

TSMC said its net profit for the first quarter of 2026 rose a whopping 58.3 percent from a year ago to NT$572.5 billion ($18 billion).

The figure trounced estimates of NT$540.20 billion in a Bloomberg survey of analysts.
Governments and tech giants are pouring hundreds of billions of dollars into building new data centers that can run and train AI tools such as chatbots, image generators and agents that can execute tasks.

Last month, Jensen Huang, head of top US chip designer Nvidia, said the entire tech world feels they could develop their AI and grow revenue "if they could just get more capacity".

Ahead of the earnings announcement, Ian Lyall at Proactive Investors said it appeared TSMC is "so deeply embedded in the AI supply chain that macro headwinds are struggling to leave a mark".

"Advanced-node chip production, the bleeding-edge manufacturing that only TSMC can reliably deliver at scale, is running at capacity," he noted.

TSMC is "supplying chips for artificial intelligence accelerators, next-generation smartphones, and the data center build-out that is consuming capital at a pace that has surprised even its most bullish observers", Lyall said.

A weaker Taiwanese dollar had also boosted TSMC's revenues from overseas sales, AFP reported.

On Thursday, TSMC said net revenue for the first quarter came in at NT$1.13 trillion, up 35.1 percent year-on-year.

A note from UBS analysts had predicted strong quarterly results for TSMC but warned that consumer demand was weakening as a result of higher prices caused by a global memory chip shortage fueled by the AI boom.

"Cloud AI demand continues to strengthen, but we think supply constraints will limit meaningful upside for TSMC this year," the UBS team said.

"Middle East tensions add a layer of macro uncertainty, but AI spend should stay insulated, barring a protracted conflict."

The UBS analysts predicted "limited disruption from tight helium supply on TSMC's production".

Helium gas is a key material in the chip supply chain, and Qatar -- one of the countries affected by the war in the Middle East -- is one of its few large-scale producers.

TSMC said Thursday it does not expect the war to impact its supply of chipmaking materials such as helium and hydrogen in the near term.