The Reddit consensus
On r/australia, r/AusParents and r/Parenting, threads about the under-16 ban swing between support for the intent and doubt about how it plays out at the kitchen table.
- A common point: the ban targets account holding and age-gating, but kids still watch enormous amounts of YouTube — logged out, on a parent's device, or via shared screens — so it doesn't decide what actually plays.
- Privacy worries are loud: parents are wary of age-verification requiring ID or face scans, and of handing more personal data to platforms or third-party verifiers.
- Many parents say they'd rather own the control themselves than depend on how each platform interprets 'reasonable steps.'
- The practical recommendation that recurs: set up your own guardrails on YouTube — a whitelist of approved channels — so your child's experience is safe regardless of what the law does or doesn't cover.
Reddit's takeaway: the ban governs accounts, not content, and raises privacy flags. Parents who want certainty are curating YouTube themselves rather than relying on age verification.






