MALAYSIA / MENA Newswire / — Malaysia began enforcing new rules on Monday that bar children younger than 16 from owning or registering social media accounts, a policy that has drawn scrutiny from rights advocates and child-focused organizations over its effect on privacy, expression and young people’s digital participation. The restrictions apply to major platforms with at least 8 million users in the country, including Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube, and require age-verification systems for account access.

The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission has placed compliance duties on licensed service providers, not parents, with penalties of up to RM10 million for companies that fail to meet the requirements. The rules cover account ownership and registration for users under 16, rather than all internet access. Existing users may also be required to verify their age, while platforms have been given flexibility to choose systems that satisfy regulatory requirements and privacy obligations.
Digital rights group Article 19 has criticized the measure as disproportionate, saying mandatory age verification can affect the privacy and freedom of expression of both adults and children. The organization has raised concern over methods that rely on government-issued documents, arguing that identity checks can require users to disclose sensitive personal data to access online spaces used for communication, learning, community participation and public information.
Rights groups cite access concerns
UNICEF has said age restrictions alone are not sufficient to keep children safe online and has warned that social media bans can carry risks when they reduce young people’s access to digital spaces. The organization has called for stronger platform accountability, safety-by-design requirements, child rights impact assessments, complaints systems and transparency measures as part of broader online protection. Its position recognizes both child safety needs and children’s rights in the digital environment.
The United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child has stated that children’s rights must be respected, protected and fulfilled in digital environments, including rights linked to expression, privacy, education, association and access to information. That framework treats digital participation as part of modern childhood, not only as a risk category. For teenagers, online platforms often function as communication tools for school communities, peer relationships, creative activity and social interaction.
Verification raises privacy questions
Malaysia’s rules require platforms to confirm that users are at least 16, but the regulator has not mandated a single verification technology. Available approaches may include identity documents or other recognized age checks, depending on how providers implement their systems. Privacy advocates have said age-verification systems can create data protection concerns if they require broad collection, storage or processing of personal information from users who are seeking access to everyday communication services.
The Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission has framed the new requirements as part of the Online Safety Act 2025, while critics have focused on whether a blanket age threshold limits access more than necessary. Article 19 has urged authorities to pause the under-16 restriction and review verification methods through parliamentary scrutiny and public consultation. The debate now centers on how Malaysia enforces child protection online while preserving privacy, expression and digital participation for young people.