Saturday, March 7, 2026
More
    HomeAmericaAustralia asks for meeting with Roblox after grooming, content complaints

    Australia asks for meeting with Roblox after grooming, content complaints

    -

    SYDNEY, Feb 10 (Reuters) - The ‌Australian government has called a meeting with gaming platform Roblox ​over reports of child grooming and exposure to graphic content on the platform, while a regulator said ⁠it will test whether the U.S.-listed firm had delivered on child-safety commitments.

    Communications Minister Anika Wells said she wrote to Roblox to express "grave concern" about reports that children ​were being approached by predators and exposed to harmful material.

    "The reports we've been hearing about children being ‌exposed to graphic content on Roblox and predators actively using the platform to groom young people are horrendous," Wells said in a statement. 

    "Australian parents and children expect more ⁠from Roblox."

    A Roblox spokesperson said the company had robust safety policies ⁠and processes to help protect users that go beyond many other platforms, and that it would meet Wells to discuss the steps it takes to keep the community safe.

    "We have filters designed to block the sharing of personal information, our chat features ‌don't allow user-to-user image or video sharing, and age checks are required before anyone ⁠has access to chat," the spokesperson said by email.

    "Those ‌same checks are also used to limit kids and ​teens to only chatting with others of similar age by default."

    Wells' statement shows a cooling relationship between Australia and the popular gaming platform, which rolled out an ‌age-assurance requirement in 2025 to limit online chats to narrow ​age windows and prevent child ⁠grooming. 

    Australia's eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant welcomed Roblox's measure and recommended against ‌including the company in a social media ⁠ban that began in December.

    Inman Grant said Roblox's age-based safety features will be tested, and noted that fines of up to A$49.5 million ($35 million) could be sought if ​the platform failed to comply ‌with the country's online child protection laws. 

    "We remain highly concerned by ongoing reports regarding ⁠the exploitation of children on the Roblox ​service, and exposure to harmful material," Inman Grant said.    

    ($1 = 1.4138 Australian dollars)

    (Reporting by ​Byron Kaye; Editing by Paul Simao)

    tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM1907C-VIEWIMAGE

    Author

    Stay Connected

    1,800FansLike
    259FollowersFollow
    121FollowersFollow
    1,263FollowersFollow
    90,000SubscribersSubscribe

    Related articles

    Latest posts

    Share on Social Media

    spot_img