The news: TikTok, Meta, and Snap are facing unprecedented regulatory pushback in the Asia-Pacific region as Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, Pakistan, and Australia enact laws to protect children.
Governments in the region are passing first-of-their-kind legislation that compels social media companies to ban or verify minors younger than 18, license their operations, and hand over identities on demand, per Bloomberg.
Why it’s worth watching: The patchwork of laws spans emerging markets that encompass up to 40% of Facebook accounts and half of TikTok’s top-10 user bases, turning the region from a growth engine into a potential regulatory minefield.
New legislation and laws in the works include:
- In July 2024, Malaysia’s government mandated that social platforms secure operating licenses.
- Australia passed a law in December banning accounts for sub-16 users; violations will cost up to AUD 50 million.
- A Vietnam law requiring platforms to verify users and share IDs on request took effect in December.
- Pakistan proposed a law last year for social apps’ mandatory registration with a new agency.
- Indonesia is drafting age rules that could lock under-18s out of social feeds.
- Singapore is hinting at its own minimum-age mandate.
The Asia-Pacific region’s strict social media rulings could set global precedents directly challenging the growth and expansion of TikTok, Meta, and Snap in growth markets.
Key stat: The push for limiting minors’ access to social media is widespread—nearly 7 in 10 adults in Latin America believe minors should be prohibited from using social media, per Ipsos.
Compliance and market risk: Age gates, real-time ID checks, and government controls don’t just stifle social media companies’ operations, they clamp down a key demographic in the most populous growth markets.
For marketers and platforms alike, the message is clear: Adapt to Asia-Pacific’s new rules or risk losing access to the world’s most valuable digital frontiers.