Malaysia to introduce new rules to protect youth on online platforms

Malaysia to introduce new rules to protect youth on online platforms
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Summary Malaysia will enforce new rules from June 1 requiring online platforms to restrict under-16 users and strengthen content moderation to reduce children’s exposure to harmful online content.

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysia will introduce new measures from June 1 ​to protect children and reduce their exposure to ‌harmful content on online platforms, its communications regulator said on Friday.

The new rules will require online service providers to ​include safeguards that limit account registration and ​ownership by users under the age of ⁠16, as well as implement stronger content governance ​on their platforms, the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission ​said in a statement.

The measures are aimed at providing age-appropriate protections and restrictions for high-risk features on online platforms, the commission ​said.

Online platform providers will be required to have "effective ​reporting and response mechanisms, advertiser verification measures and the labelling ‌of ⁠manipulated content where appropriate," the commission added.

A grace period will be provided for online platforms to implement the measures, the commission said, without specifying the ​duration.

Malaysia has in ​recent years ⁠stepped up scrutiny of social media companies after finding a sharp rise in ​harmful online content. Malaysian authorities consider ​online ⁠gambling, scams, child pornography and grooming, cyberbullying and content related to race, religion and royalty as harmful.

The government ⁠plans age ​verification for users this year, ​following similar moves around the world to limit social media use ​among minors.

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