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Daily London > World Affairs > TikTok and Instagram alternatives booming as Australian kids switch before social media ban
World Affairs

TikTok and Instagram alternatives booming as Australian kids switch before social media ban

Daily London
By Daily London
Published: December 1, 2025
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Daily London

Australian teenagers are already switching to new platforms ahead of the government’s landmark under-16 social media ban.

Millions of accounts will be closed in just 10 days but the biggest challenge may come after that.

Some students have already shifted to smaller networks not found on the government’s banned list.

The eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Gran. (Kate Geraghty)

“We watched what American kids did when TikTok went down – they went to Rednote, they went to Lemon8, which is an Instagram clone,” eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said.

” … some of that is going to happen but that’s what teenagers do.”

Yope, a photo-sharing app listed as lifestyle in mobile app stores, is rocketing up the charts.

A report from Queensland University of Technology released today found young users wanted social media improved but didn’t believe bans were the answer.

Nor did they believe the age restrictions were enforceable.

“Any attempt to just shut it off overnight like they’re going to do is completely disregarding our kids’ intelligence,” Victorian Greens Senator Steph Hodgins-May said.

Education Minister Jason Clare said if other “equally insidious” platforms arose, MPs would be able to ban them too.

This would create a whack-a-mole situation with politicians attempting to keep up with tech innovators but Communications Minister Anika Wells insisted the focus would be on apps causing the most harm.

Communications Minister Anika Wells. (Getty)

“Big tech is agile, innovative and moves quickly, so we must do the same,” she said.

“We expect the laws to be untidy but that doesn’t mean it’s not worth doing.”

For now, most of popular apps on the banned list have begun informing users under 16 that their accounts will be shut down in the week ahead.

“This needs to be compassionate and kind because it’s going to be a huge transition for young people,” Inman Grant said.

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