Less-known social apps surge as teen users look for new home

Under-16s hoping to find a new online home once they’re barred from Snapchat and TikTok in a matter of days may find the process tougher than anticipated, as the government clarifies that the so-called social media ban will extend further than the 10 apps it has specifically called out.
Lesser-known social apps including photo-sharing group chat service Yope, and TikTok-linked Instagram-like Lemon8, have surged up the charts of most-downloaded apps in Australia, as underage influencers use their final fortnight on social media to guide their communities to greener pastures.
Yope has been around for a few years, and is a bit like Instagram except with private chatrooms instead of public posts and feeds.
But according to a spokesman for the eSafety commissioner, any app that meets the criteria of the new laws will be expected to block users under 16 come December 10, no matter how esoteric they are.
“eSafety has published its assessments of major online services to provide greater certainty for Australian families and industry. However, with just over a week to go, eSafety is also reminding the broader online industry all services are obliged to comply with the law,” the spokesman said.
“This means services themselves must continually assess whether they meet the definition of an age-restricted social media platform. If they do … they must take reasonable steps to ensure users under 16 do not hold an account.”
Companies that do not take these steps face penalties of up to $49.5 million.
Loading
Many messages and videos shared by young users have been made in good humour, acknowledging the difficulty in starting from the ground up at another service. But the attention was enough to drive Yope to the top of Apple’s charts on Friday, as reported by Crikey.
It’s unclear whether the service would be considered an age-restricted social media platform, which the government essentially defines as any app with a sole or significant purpose of social interaction and user-generated content, which is not a messaging or gaming platform. For example, eSafety has said Snapchat, TikTok and Instagram are restricted, while WhatsApp is not. Yope primarily focuses on group messaging, but it does have features similar to Snapchat, including “streaks” to reward frequent conversation. Using eSafety’s own self-assessment criteria, it would come down to whether Yope can argue it has a primary purpose of enabling communication by messaging, which would make it exempt.




