Australia news live: Meta blocks nearly 550,000 accounts in first month of under-16s social media ban; Victorian bushfires expected to burn for weeks | Australia news

Meta removes access to nearly 550,000 accounts in first month of under-16s social media ban

Meta said this morning it has removed access to almost 550,000 accounts belonging to people believed to be under 16, its first compliance report a month after the landmark social media ban law went into effect.

That figure includes about 330,000 Instagram accounts, 173,000 Facebook accounts and nearly 40,000 on Threads. The company said compliance was a “multi-layered process that we will continue to refine”.

Meta said while it was taking all steps necessary to comply with the law, it continued to speak with the Australia government to “find a better way forward” instead of “blanket bans”, adding:

As we’ve stated previously, Meta is committed to meeting its compliance obligations and is taking the necessary steps to remain compliant with the law. That said, we call on the Australian government to engage with industry constructively to find a better way forward, such as incentivising all of industry to raise the standard in providing safe, privacy-preserving, age appropriate experiences online, instead of blanket bans.

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Victoria emergency services minister urges residents to respect roadblocks and avoid burned-out areas

Vicki Ward, Victoria’s emergency services minister, is providing an update on the ongoing firefighting effort in the state.

She told RN Breakfast upwards of 300 structures have been lost, but noted that figure included buildings like sheds. But she said it’s likely at least 100 homes have been lost overall, “if not more”.

The remains of the Ruffy Community centre is seen in Ruffy, Victoria. Photograph: James Ross/EPA

Eleven recovery centres are open in Victoria that can provide assistance to anyone in need, and Ward said the state government was rolling out personal hardship assistance payments alongside the federal government’s disaster relief payments.

She said roadblocks and barriers to entry remained important to keep people safe, noting people should abide by those restrictions and avoid fire scar areas:

We need to have … qualified people, who know what they’re doing, going in there to check to make sure that roadways are safe because trees can just fall on people.

We do not want to see those kinds of incidents. We do not want to see people who have done the right thing, who have left early, who have saved their lives, the lives of their families, then go back into a fire area only to be harmed, possibly killed by a falling tree.

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