Noice Logo
Masuk
Masuk

Australia is first country to ban social media for children

11 Menit

Australia is first country to ban social media for children

10 Desember 2025


EU countries want to fast-track a decision to indefinitely immobilise up to €210bn in Russian sovereign assets, investors have increased bets that interest rates in major economies could diverge next year, and Berlin stands ready to throw its weight behind a German candidate to be the next president of the European Central Bank. Plus, Australia is now the first country in the world to restrict social media access for kids under the age of 16. Mentioned in this podcast: Trump gives Zelenskyy ‘days’ to respond to peace proposal EU races to bypass Viktor Orbán on Russia assets before summit Investors increase bets on ECB rate rise in threat to dollar Germany sees high hurdles to winning ECB presidency The countdown to the world’s first social media ban for children Note: The FT does not use generative AI to voice its podcasts  Today’s FT News Briefing was hosted and edited by Marc Filippino, and produced by Fiona Symon, Victoria Craig and Sonja Hutson. Our show was mixed by Kelly Garry. Additional help from Gavin Kallmann, Michael Lello and David da Silva. The FT’s acting co-head of audio is Topher Forhecz. The show’s theme music is by Metaphor Music. Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Australia is first country to ban social media for children
rss
FT News Briefing

Subscribe
Komentar












Lihat episode lain
Buka semua fitur dengan download aplikasi Noice
Kunjungi App