On Monday, Communications and Digital Minister Meutya Hafid said the government planned to issue a regulation to set a minimum age for social media users, after discussing the proposal to protect children online with President Prabowo Subianto.
he government will impose interim child protection guidelines on social media companies while the government carves out a law to set a minimum age for users of the platforms, a senior Communications and Digital Ministry official said on Wednesday.
On Monday, Communications and Digital Minister Meutya Hafid said the government planned to issue a regulation to set a minimum age for social media users, after discussing the proposal to protect children online with President Prabowo Subianto.
The plan follows Australia's decision to ban children under 16 from accessing social media, with fines for tech giants from Instagram and Facebook owner Meta to TikTok, owned by China's ByteDance, if they failed to prevent children from accessing their platforms.
"What the minister means is that the government is headed for the direction of a stronger regulation on age limit, which is through the formation of a law," Alexander Sabar, Director General for Digital Surveillance told Reuters.
In the meantime, the government will issue a regulation for digital platforms, including social media companies, to adhere to child protection guidelines, he said, without providing details.
"The emphasis for the government regulation is child protection -- how they are protected from physical, mental, or moral perils," he said, adding the regulation would not totally limit children's access to social media.
Meta and TikTok did not respond to requests for comment.
Nurmayanti, a 46-year-old mother said she agreed with the plan to curtail social media content, particularly content promoting pornography or discrimination.
"They now can freely open social media so that is concerning to us as parents," she said, adding the law must be strict and clear.
However, Anis Hidayah, a commissioner at the National Commission on Human rights, said that limiting the internet for children was important but the government must be careful to not curb their right to information.
Nearly 50 percent of children under 12 in tech-savvy Indonesia use the internet with some respondents of that age group using Facebook, Instagram, and TikTok, according to a survey by the Indonesia internet service providers' association.
The Australian parliament last year passed 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.
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