- Malaysia's jailed ex-PM Najib to argue appeal for house arrest
- US wine merchants urge exclusions from blanket tariffs
- Mitchell's 84 sets England 104 target to beat New Zealand
- Australian PM ready to 'engage' with Musk on social media teen ban
- Ten-man Botafogo win Copa Libertadores
- Russell on pole as Verstappen given grid penalty for Qatar Grand Prix
- Brazil's ten-man Botafogo win Copa Libertadores
- Shiffrin to miss Killington slalom after race fall
- Las Palmas stun Barca on 125th anniversary, Atletico rout Valladolid
- Flat PSG drop points in Nantes draw
- In-form Atletico hammer Valladolid as Griezmann nets stunner
- Ledecka says 2026 Winter Olympic schedule will hurt her medal hopes
- Kane limps off as Bayern rescue draw at Dortmund
- Georgia president will not step down until 'illegitimate' elections re-run: AFP
- Red Bull threw ‘kitchen sink’ at Verstappen car, says Horner
- 'We made it crazy': Arteta revels in Arsenal's five-goal romp
- England and USA women play out Wembley stalemate
- Norris and McLaren remain upbeat for team title
- Trump calls meeting with Trudeau 'productive' after tariff threat
- Musiala rescues point for Bayern at Borussia Dortmund
- Trump taps Charles Kushner, father of his son-in-law, as envoy to France
- Champion Verstappen takes pole for Qatar Grand Prix
- Rennes score five as Sampaoli gets first win
- Shiffrin crashes out of Killington giant slalom won by Hector
- Five-star Arsenal climb to second place after crushing West Ham
- Arsenal up to second, Kluivert's penalty hat-trick makes history
- Farrell 'proud' of Ireland's grit in victory over Australia
- AC Milan cruise past Empoli to eye Euro spots
- Toulouse consolidate Top14 lead, Jalibert extends at Bordeaux
- Defiant Adani says committed to compliance after US indictment
- Lampard's Coventry rescue draw in his first game in charge
- Thousands gather in Georgia for fresh pro-EU protests
- 'Exhausted' Marchand skips short course swimming worlds
- Taiwan's Lai arrives in US for start of Pacific tour
- Scrappy Ireland give Farrell winning sending-off
- Kluivert's penalty hat-trick makes history, Brentford thrash Leicester
- Schick winner for Leverkusen at Union Berlin keeps Bayern in sight, Leipzig lose ground
- US 'Black Friday' online spending put at record $10.8 bn
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- Las Palmas stun Liga leaders Barca on 125th anniversary
- Piastri wins Qatar Grand Prix sprint as McLaren widen gap on Ferrari
- Syria war monitor says rebels control most of Aleppo
- Trudeau meets Trump in Florida as tariff threats loom
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- South Africa thrash Sri Lanka to fuel World Test Championship bid
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- South Africa beat Sri Lanka by 233 runs in first Test
- Incumbent centre-right in 'driving seat' in Irish vote
Australian PM ready to 'engage' with Musk on social media teen ban
Australia's prime minister said Sunday he was ready to "engage" with billionaire X owner Elon Musk over his criticism of the government's ban on under-16s joining social media.
Anthony Albanese hailed the parliament's Thursday passage of landmark legislation requiring social media firms to take "reasonable steps" to prevent young teens from having accounts.
The law, which will come into effect after 12 months, gives few details of how it will be enforced, including how sites like Facebook, Instagram and X will verify users' ages.
Musk -- who has been named Donald Trump's government efficiency chief in the incoming US administration -- posted on X last month that the law "seems like a backdoor way to control access to the Internet by all Australians".
"We will talk to anyone," Albanese said when asked if he would discuss the legislation with Musk.
"With regard to Elon Musk, he has an agenda. He's entitled to push that as the owner of X, formerly known as Twitter," Albanese told Australian public broadcaster ABC.
When the interviewer mentioned that Musk was also Trump's "right-hand man", the prime minister replied: "We will engage, we will engage."
Social media firms that fail to comply with the new law face fines of up to Aus$50 million (US$32.5 million) for "systemic breaches".
Musk's platform in October lost a legal bid to avoid a US$417,000 fine levelled by Australia's online watchdog, which has accused X of failing to stamp out harmful posts.
- 'Bullying' -
The government will decide over the next 12 months how to implement the ban, Albanese said, insisting, however, that it would not require people to provide identification.
"The obligation will be on social media companies to do everything they can to make sure that those people under 16 don't have access to social media," the prime minister said.
"We know that social media companies have more information about you and I than some of our friends do," he added.
"We know that they are able to do that, and the obligation will be on them."
Albanese said he was "determined" to implement the legislation.
"I've met parents who have had to bury their children as a result of the impact that social media has had as a result of bullying, and we need to do something about it," he said.
Several social media giants have promised to work with the government on implementing the law.
But they have also criticised the legislation, saying it was "rushed", full of unanswered questions, and did not take into account the views of experts who opposed it.
The UN children's charity UNICEF Australia warned this week that the law was no "silver bullet" against online harm and could push kids into "covert and unregulated" spaces online.
T.Resende--PC