UPDATE 1-Malaysia to introduce new rules to protect youth on online platforms

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.


Reuters | Updated: 22-05-2026 10:56 IST | Created: 22-05-2026 10:56 IST
UPDATE 1-Malaysia to introduce new rules to protect youth on online platforms

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.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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