KOURTNEY KARDASHIAN AND TRAVIS BARKER MAKE RARE RED CARPET RETURN AT TRIBECA FILM FESTIVAL DATE NIGHT. (PHOTO).

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 Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker make rare red carpet return at Tribeca Film Festival date night Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker made a rare joint appearance on Saturday night, stepping out together at the Tribeca Film Festival for a date night in New York City. The couple returned to the red carpet for the first time in over two years as they attended the premiere of Barker’s documentary, Travis Barker: Louder Than Fear. They arrived in coordinated black outfits, presenting a sleek, unified look for the evening. Kardashian, 47, wore a long-sleeved satin gown featuring a white collar and button detailing down the front.  The outfit included a high slit that revealed her legs, and she layered a black bralette underneath. She completed the look with black pointed heels and a satin clutch, wearing her hair down with straight bangs framing her face. Barker, 50, kept his style classic in a black suit, finishing the outfit with dark square sunglasses.  He was also j...

AUSTRALIA TO IMPLEMENT SOCIAL MEDIA BAN, TRIGGERING INTERNATIONAL CRACKDOWN. (PHOTO).


 Australia to implement social media ban, triggering international crackdown

Australia is set to become the first country to enforce a minimum age for social media use starting Wednesday, requiring platforms such as Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube to block more than a million accounts. The move is seen as the start of a potential global trend in social media regulation.

From midnight local time, 10 major platforms must prevent users under 16 from accessing their services or face fines of up to A$49.5 million ($33 million). While parents and child advocacy groups have welcomed the law, tech companies and free speech advocates have criticized it as overly restrictive. The rollout concludes a year of debate over whether governments can intervene in the use of technology by children, and will serve as a global case study for lawmakers frustrated by what they see as insufficient voluntary safety measures by the tech industry.

Countries including Denmark and Malaysia, along with some U.S. states, have signaled plans for similar restrictions. The push follows revelations from internal Meta documents showing the company was aware its platforms contributed to body image issues and suicidal thoughts among teens, even as it publicly denied such effects. Experts suggest Australia’s approach may inspire similar measures elsewhere, with the British government closely monitoring the policy.

The ban initially affects 10 platforms, including YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok, though the government intends to expand the list as new apps emerge and young users migrate to alternative platforms. Most companies plan to comply by using age inference tools, age estimation from selfies, or verification through ID or linked bank accounts. Elon Musk has criticized the ban, calling it a potential “backdoor way to control access to the internet,” and legal challenges in Australia are pending.

For social media businesses, the restrictions mark a shift as user growth stalls and engagement declines. Platforms argue they earn little from advertising to under-16s but see the ban as disrupting a pipeline of future users; government data shows 86% of Australians aged 8 to 15 currently use social media. Experts say the era of social media as a space for unregulated self-expression may be coming to an end, with stricter regulations and protections for young users likely to reshape the industry.


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