There’s a lot of noise coming from the MENA region’s music business.
The Middle East and North Africa was the fastest-growing recorded music region globally in 2024, jumping 22.8% YoY, according to data published by the IFPI in March. Streaming in the MENA region accounted for 99.5% of total revenues.
Saudi Arabia, one of the region’s key players, is a high-potential market with a young, highly connected and digitally savvy population, and its local music business is becoming increasingly visible on the world stage.
That has been driven in part by major music company partnerships and investments, as well as large-scale events such as this past weekend’s XP Music Futures conference and the upcoming Soundstorm Festival, which will feature superstars including Post Malone, Calvin Harris, and Cardi B performing in Riyadh.
Both events, XP Music Futures and SoundStorm, are organized by entertainment company MDLBEAST.
XP Music Futures 2025
MDLBEAST confirmed that the MENA-focused XP wrapped in Riyadh this past weekend (December 4-6) with its largest programming slate to date: 101 sessions, 20 workshops, and 284 speakers from 39 nations. The conference’s NITE program featured 203 artists across 113 acts representing 38 countries.
According to Mazen Khamis, Executive Director of Marketing, Commercial, and Products at MDLBEAST, the conference has evolved significantly since its inception.
“In the beginning, XP attracted mostly regional talent and industry insiders,” he explains. “Today, we’re seeing global labels, tech founders, festival operators, policymakers, managers, and creators from all over the world. It reflects how quickly the MENA music ecosystem is developing, and how much confidence international players now have in the Saudi market.”
The conference maintained its dual-format structure, pairing daytime industry programming with nighttime showcases. Khamis describes this approach as essential to XP’s value proposition: “I always say that XP is a full journey: you think during the day and you feel at night,” he says.
“The DAY program is where deals, ideas, and strategies are shaped. The NITE program is where people see the culture in action, where discovery happens. From a business point of view, both sides are equally important. Investors want to understand the market but also feel the audience. Artists want access to industry but also want to perform.”
“In the beginning, XP attracted mostly regional talent and industry insiders. Today, we’re seeing global labels, tech founders, festival operators, policymakers, managers, and creators from all over the world.”
Mazen Khamis, MDLBEAST
This year’s edition restructured the program to “prioritize networking and meaningful interactions” integrating initiatives like HUNNA, Hearful, and XPERFORM directly into the main “flow” of the event. “One major lesson is that XP works best when people can connect easily,” Khamis notes. “We learned a lot about movement, scheduling, and how DAY and NITE interact with each other. Reducing friction across the site played a huge role in our design choices this year.”
XP’s talent development programs saw Jafar Amin win the fourth season of vocal talent competition XPERFORM, while Radish.world took the fifth edition of the Storm Shaker DJ competition. Both winners secured performance slots at Soundstorm 2025, scheduled for this coming weekend, December 11-13.
Each of these programs fills a specific gap in the ecosystem, according to Khamis. “HUNNA empowers female creatives and leaders. Sound Futures supports startups and music-tech innovation. XPERFORM helps emerging artists build real careers beyond the event. The impact doesn’t stop when XP ends, these programs build momentum for the entire year.”
India as Focus Country
This year’s XP marked several notable developments, with India serving as the focus country. Programming included sessions on Indian music’s global expansion and partnerships with Indian brands.
“India and the Middle East have always had strong cultural connections, and both markets are growing fast with young, engaged audiences,” explains Khamis. “We’re already seeing natural collaborations between the two regions, so spotlighting India allows us to build a more structured bridge through co-writing, co-producing, touring, and investment. It’s a relationship that feels both natural and full of potential.”
Sessions at the wider conference covered topics including music’s role in sporting identity — following Soundstorm’s collaboration with Inter Milan FC — and how music events shape destination development across the region.
Khamis emphasizes that XP’s role extends beyond simply hosting panels and showcases. “XP brings everyone into the same room, creators, startups, investors, executives, policymakers. When that happens, opportunities start to form naturally. Programs like Sound Futures give investors direct access to music-tech innovation, while XPERFORM spotlights talent that’s ready for development. By showing the full ecosystem in one place, XP makes it easier for global players to understand where the opportunities are and how to get involved.”
What sets XP apart from other global music conferences, according to Khamis, is its regional specificity. “XP is built for this region, not copied from anywhere else. It reflects the ambition, identity, and energy of the Middle East while being completely connected to global industry standards.
“What sets it apart is the blend of conference, culture, festival, and innovation. And because XP connects directly to Soundstorm as both events are just one week apart, it creates something most conferences don’t have: immediate access to one of the world’s most exciting music audiences.”
Soundstorm 2025
MDLBEAST also organises a separate music festival called Soundstorm, which is scheduled for this coming weekend, December 11-13.
For this years’s event, Khamis and his team have undertaken a complete redesign of the festival’s layout. The size of the event is something to behold. Last year’s festival drew 450,000 people over the three-day period.
“This year, we pushed Soundstorm into its biggest evolution yet,” Khamis explains. “We rebuilt the entire festival as a City of Beats, a place you can actually navigate like a mini city with its own districts and personality. We now have 14 stages across four districts, all connected through Downtown, which acts as the heart of the whole experience.”
The new structure features 14 stages organized across four distinct districts, East, West, North, and South, connected by a central Downtown area. At the center sits Downtown, described as “a dynamic playground for food, fashion, and culture” and the main meeting point for social moments. “From there, fans can move naturally into the East, West, North, or South districts depending on what sound and energy they want,” says Khamis.
“Soundstorm has always been a festival of a huge scale. And that’s definitely something we want to keep but we felt the need to make it feel more intimate and bring things closer together, that’s how the idea of turning it into a small city came about. Our focus was simple: smoother movement, clearer navigation, and a festival that truly feels like a cultural city.”
“Soundstorm has always been a festival of a huge scale.”
Mazen Khamis, MDLBEAST
East forms the festival’s “largest and most high-impact zone” anchored by the Big Beast mainstage, built, according to MDLBEAST, for “global superstars and peak-energy performances”. The 6AG stage, meanwhile, “champions regional talent” with a focus on Saudi and Middle Eastern artists.
The North section of the site features stages including Park, which “brings band-led energy”, while Mixtape serves as the festival’s home of hip-hop and R&B. The Brass stage adds “groove-forward sets with live instrumental character”, and Yard spotlights indie, alternative, and emerging artists.
West becomes Soundstorm’s “dance and techno” district, with stages including Tunnel, Port, Plexi, Silk, Log, and Greenhouse “each bring their own corner of the electronic spectrum,” according to Soundstorm, “from EDM and progressive techno to house, disco, and harder techno”.
The South side of the site focuses on “ambient, slower, more atmospheric sounds” and includes Neon, a glowing 360-degree tent, and Roog, an “intimate space for deeper, slower-building electronic sets”.
The festival will host over 200 performers across the three days, with a superstar lineup that features Cardi B, Metro Boomin, Pitbull, Tyla, Benson Boone, Lil Yachty, and more global acts, alongside hundreds of regional and international electronic, hip-hop, and pop artists. The lineup reflects the festival’s positioning as one of the region’s largest music events, blending chart-topping global artists with emerging talent.
The transformation presented significant operational challenges. “When you redesign a festival of this size, you’re balancing creativity with massive operations,” Khamis notes. “Turning Soundstorm into a 14-stage city required a new approach to crowd flow, transportation, staging, and technology.”
One of his biggest priorities was ensuring the festival remains navigable despite its growth. “Even as the festival grows, it still feels clear and easy for people to move around,” he says. “Bringing in improved tech — like upgrades to our ticketing and navigation systems through NOFOMO, added another layer of complexity. But these challenges push us to innovate, and that’s what makes Soundstorm what it is.”
When asked about MDLBEAST’s trajectory, Khamis sees continued expansion.
“MDLBEAST has grown from a single festival into a multi-vertical entertainment company. My work has focused on expanding our commercial footprint, shaping new products, and building partnerships.”
Looking ahead, he envisions MDLBEAST “becoming a global cultural powerhouse, exporting Saudi creativity, expanding our product ecosystem, and building stronger connections between music, technology, and culture. Everything we’re doing is aligned with Vision 2030 and the long-term development of the creative economy.”
Seoul’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said Russian, Chinese planes entered its air defence zone during the joint exercise.
South Korea and Japan separately scrambled fighter jets after Russian and Chinese military aircraft conducted a joint air patrol near both countries.
Seven Russian and two Chinese aircraft entered South Korea’s Air Defence Identification Zone (KADIZ) at approximately 10am local time (01:00 GMT) on Tuesday, according to the office of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in Seoul.
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The planes, which included fighter jets and bombers, were spotted before they entered the KADIZ – which is not territorial airspace but where planes are expected to identify themselves – and South Korea deployed “fighter jets to take tactical measures in preparation for any contingencies”, according to reports.
The Russian and Chinese planes flew in and out of the South Korean air defence zone for an hour before leaving, the military said, according to South Korea’s official Yonhap news agency.
Japan separately deployed military aircraft to “strictly implement” air defence measures “against potential airspace violations”, following the reported joint patrol of Russia and China, Japanese Minister of Defence Shinjiro Koizumi said.
In a statement posted on social media late on Tuesday, Koizumi said two Russian “nuclear-capable Tu-95 bombers” flew from the Sea of Japan to the Tsushima Strait, and met with two Chinese jets “capable of carrying long-range missiles”.
At least eight other Chinese J-16 fighter jets and a Russian A-50 aircraft also accompanied the bombers as they conducted a joint flight “around” Japan, travelling between Okinawa’s main island and Miyako Island, Koizumi said.
“The repeated joint flights of bombers by both countries signify an expansion and intensification of activities around our country, while clearly intending to demonstrate force against our nation, posing a serious concern for our national security,” he added.
Koizumi’s statement comes just days after he accused Chinese fighter jets on Sunday of directing their fire-control radar at Japanese aircraft in two separate incidents over international waters near Okinawa.
On Monday, Japan’s Ministry of Defence said that it had monitored the movements of the Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning and accompanying support vessels near Okinawa since Friday, adding that dozens of takeoffs and landings from Chinese aircraft on the carrier were monitored.
Japan said it was the “first time” that fighter jet operations on a Chinese aircraft carrier had been confirmed in waters between Okinawa’s main island and Minami-Daitojima island to the southeast.
Chinese aircraft carrier Liaoning sails through the Miyako Strait near Okinawa on its way to the Pacific in this handout photo taken by Japan Self-Defence Forces and released by the Joint Staff Office of the Defence Ministry of Japan on April 4, 2021 [Joint Staff Office of the Defence Ministry of Japan via Reuters]
China’s Ministry of National Defence said on Tuesday that it had organised the joint air drills with Russia’s military according to “annual cooperation plans”.
The air drills took place above the East China Sea and western Pacific Ocean, the ministry said, calling the exercises the “10th joint strategic air patrol” with Russia.
Moscow also confirmed the joint exercise with Beijing, saying that it had lasted eight hours and that some foreign fighter jets followed the Russian and Chinese aircraft.
“At certain stages of the route, the strategic bombers were followed by fighter jets from foreign states,” the Russian Defence Ministry said.
Since 2019, China and Russia have regularly flown military aircraft near South Korean and Japanese airspace without prior notice, citing joint military exercises.
In November 2024, Seoul scrambled jets as five Chinese and six Russian military planes flew through its air defence zone. In 2022, Japan also deployed jets after warplanes from Russia and China neared its airspace.
China and Russia have expanded military and defence ties since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine nearly four years ago. Both countries are also allies of North Korea, which is seen as an adversary in both South Korea and Japan.
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Godwin AsedibaBBC News Komla Dumor Award winner, Eastern Province, Sierra Leone
Andre Lombard / BBC
Namina Jenneh is mourning her 17-year-old son who died while mining for gold
There is a sense of disbelief in this Sierra Leonean village as people weep in front of the bodies of two teenage boys wrapped in white cloth.
The day before, 16-year-old Mohamed Bangura and 17-year-old Yayah Jenneh left their homes in Nyimbadu, in the country’s Eastern Province, hoping to earn a little extra money for their families.
They had gone in search of gold but never returned. The makeshift pit they were digging in collapsed on them.
This was the third fatal mine accident, leaving a total of at least five children dead, in the last four years in this region.
Mohamed and Yayah were part of a phenomenon that has seen a growing number of children missing school in parts of Sierra Leone to mine the precious metal in potentially lethal pits, according to headteachers and community activists.
The Eastern Province has historically been known for diamond mining. But in recent years informal – or artisanal – gold mining has expanded as the diamond reserves have been depleted.
David Wilkins / BBC
People dig up the rich earther wherever they think they might be able to find gold
Mining sites pop up wherever local people find deposits in this land laden with riches – on farmland, in former graveyards and along riverbeds.
There are few formal mining companies operating here, but in the areas which are not considered profitable, the landscape is dotted with these unregulated pits that can be as deep as 4m (13 feet).
Similar – and equally dangerous – mines can be found in many African countries and there are often reports of deadly collapses.
Most families in Nyimbadu rely on small-scale farming and petty trading for a living. Alternative employment is scarce so the opportunity to earn some extra cash is very attractive.
But the community in the village gathered at the local funeral home know the work also comes at a price, with the loss of two young lives full of promise.
Yayah’s mother, Namina Jenneh, is a widow and had been relying on her young son to help provide for her other five children.
As someone who worked in the pits herself, she acknowledges that she introduced Yayah to mining but says: “He didn’t tell me he was going to that site – if I had known I would have stopped him.”
When she heard about the collapse, she says she begged someone to “call the excavator driver.
“When he arrived, he cleared the debris that had buried the children.”
But it was too late to save them.
Namina Jenneh
Yayah Jenneh was mining in order to help his mother support his five siblings
Ms Jenneh speaks with deep pain. On a mobile phone with a cracked screen, she scrolls through pictures of her son, a boy with bright eyes who supported her.
Sahr Ansumana, a local child protection activist, takes me to the collapsed pit.
“If you ask some parents, they’ll tell you there’s no other alternative. They are poor, they are widows, they are single parents,” he says.
“They have to take care of the kids. They themselves encourage the kids to go and mine. We are struggling and need help. It’s worrying and getting out of hand.”
But the warning goes unheeded – the loss of Yayah and Mohamed has not emptied the pits.
The day after their funerals, miners including children are back at work, their hands sifting sand by the river or inspecting the earth manually excavated in search of the glimmer of gold.
David Wilkins / BBC
Komba Sesay would like to become a lawyer but is missing school in order to mine
At one site I meet 17-year-old Komba Sesay who wants to be a lawyer, but he spends daylight hours here to support his mother.
“There is no money,” he says. “That is what we are trying to find. I am working so I can register and sit my [high school] exams. I want to return to school. I’m not happy here.”
Komba’s earnings are meagre. In most weeks he earns about $3.50 (£2.65) – less than half the country’s minimum wage. But he perseveres in the hope of striking it rich. On some, very rare, good days he has found enough ore to earn him $35.
Of course, he knows the work is risky. Komba has friends who have been injured in pit collapses. But he feels that mining is the only way he can earn some money.
David Wilkins / BBC
The dangerous work sees people digging with minimal tools in order to find some gold
And it is not only pupils who are leaving schools.
Roosevelt Bundo, the headteacher of Gbogboafeh Aladura Junior Secondary School in Nyimbadu says “teachers also leave classes to go to the mining sites, they mine together with the students”.
Their government pay cannot compete with what they may be able to earn from gold mining.
There are also wider signs of change around the mining hubs. What were once small camps have swelled into towns in the last two years.
The government says it is addressing the issue.
Information Minister Chernor Bah tells the BBC that the government remains committed to education but adds that the state recognises the many challenges people face.
“We spend about 8.9% of our GDP, the highest of any other country in this sub-region, on education,” he says, adding that funds go to teachers, school-feeding programmes and subsidies intended to keep children in the classroom.
But on the ground, reality bites. Immediate survival often wins over policy.
Charities and local activists try to remove children from the pits and place them back into school, but without reliable alternatives for income, the pits are too attractive.
Back in Nyimbado, the families of the two dead boys appear exhausted and hollowed out.
The loss is not just of two young lives. It is the steady erosion of possibility for a generation.
“We need help,” the activist Mr Ansumana says. “Not prayers. Not promises. Help.”
Hey guys, I’m going to be giving myself an at-home facial. My name is Dimi. I’m a 15-year-old entrepreneur. One day, my book will be over here. I think when I heard about it I was a bit disappointed. Social media is one of the tool to grow my business. Personally, I feel like we’re about to be silenced. Makeup, skincare. I’ve started getting into, like, the controversial opinions. I believe abortion should be legal. It honestly blew up pretty fast. Like, it got a few thousand [followers], and it was just, like, so exciting to me. Like, oh my God. Like, there’s heaps of these people that care about me. It does give you a confidence boost. Here you go, brother. Oh wow, thank you, thank you. I use social media to share my daily routines. For me, doing the content is part of doing the business. I want to be a businessman. I don’t think I would be able to express myself. Like, I love to show my creativity, and you can literally find anyone that’s in the same boat as you on there. It would would allow me to, like, communicate with other people and empower people and understand that they’re not alone. It’ll be longer before I can have a chance to publicly share things about my book or about my advocacy. It says 16, and that’s what I have in my bio. I’m just trying to see what I can do. Worst comes to worst, I would just have to wait till I’m 16, and then I’ll start a new account and hopefully I can build that back up again, which would be really hard and sad.
Mark Zandi is worried that the labor market no longer has a buffer.
So many Americans are “already living on the financial edge,” the chief economist for Moody’s Analytics told Fortune. If they start to pull back, that’s “fodder for a recession.”
The stark assessment comes as hiring has stalled, unemployment is rising – especially for the most vulnerable workers – and layoff announcements are piling up. To Zandi, the next stage is already visible: “If we actually do see layoffs pick up,” he told Fortune, “then it certainly would be a jobs recession.”
Zandi reached that assessment before the government released its long-delayed JOLTS report Tuesday, but the official numbers largely confirm the pullback he has been tracking through private data. Since the summer, job openings have risen by only a few hundred thousand and remain far below the highs seen in the frenzy of the pandemic. Layoffs upticked slightly, while quit rates fell, a sign that workers are increasingly hesitant to leave their current positions. Hiring, meanwhile, has held at 3.2%, a level consistent with employers who are not actively slashing staff but are no longer expanding their workforces either: a “low hire, low fire” market.
If the cooling in the official data looks slow, the private indicators tell a sharper story. ADP’s November report found that private employers cut 32,000 jobs, the steepest decline in more than two years. Nearly all of those losses came from small businesses, which eliminated 120,000 positions. Larger employers moved in the opposite direction and kept hiring.
For Zandi, the pattern is not random. He sees it as the continuation of a break that appeared earlier in the year, when the administration escalated reciprocal tariffs.
“If you look at when job growth really came to a standstill, it is back soon after Liberation Day,” he said.
Because these firms often lack the financial cushions that larger corporations can draw upon, payroll becomes the most immediate and often the only mechanism through which they can respond to rising input costs. The result, Zandi argues, is a labor market in which the earliest fractures appear among precisely the kinds of employers most sensitive to policy and price shifts. Those fractures then begin to ripple outward, first through hiring freezes and only later, if conditions worsen, through broader layoffs.
Layoffs are coming, Zandi warns
So for Zandi, if ADP offers a snapshot of the present, the announcement data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas hints at what may lie ahead. Employers have announced 1.1 million layoffs this year, a figure surpassed only during the pandemic shock of 2020 and the depths of the Great Recession. These announcements are global and not all will materialize as U.S. cuts, Zandi advised, yet he considers their scale meaningful because they reflect decisions made months in advance of actual separations.
“That would suggest that there are layoffs coming,” he said. “They seemingly have not occurred yet.” The disconnect between rising layoff announcements and historically low unemployment-insurance claims feels increasingly “incongruous” to him, and he suspects one reason may be that early cuts are falling on higher-income workers who receive severance or wait longer before filing for benefits, obscuring the first phase of the weakening.
Pressure is also building in pockets of the labor market that are typically harbingers of broader stress. Unemployment has risen for young workers and for Black workers, both groups that tend to see deterioration earlier in the cycle, Zandi said. Industries that rely heavily on foreign-born labor—including construction, logistics and agriculture—are grappling with a tighter supply of workers due to deportations, placing additional strain on small firms.
Meanwhile, early research on AI adoption suggests that entry-level hiring in technology and information services is already being reshaped, a development Zandi believes may be understated in traditional data sets but is nonetheless starting to influence the distribution of job opportunities. All of these dynamics contribute to what he sees as a labor market that is weakening in slow but structurally significant ways.
What has kept the labor market from slipping into outright contraction is the continued strength of spending among higher-income households, even as borrowing costs remain elevated and prices have yet to fully ease. That persistence, despite rising layoff announcements and weakening hiring, reflects how insulated wealthier consumers remain after a year of strong equity gains fueled in part by the AI boom. It is also the clearest sign that the “K-shaped economy” has not dissipated but deepened, with affluent households buoyed by financial markets while lower- and middle-income workers face mounting strain
Zandi regards this spending as one of the last buffers preventing the slowdown from becoming self-reinforcing. Lower- and middle-income households remain stretched, however, and he warns that any further erosion in hiring could push them to retrench. Because these households account for a large share of day-to-day consumer activity, even a modest pullback could turn the current pattern of weak hiring into a contraction.
A pivotal moment for the Federal Reserve
The Federal Reserve is debating over an interest rate cut Monday and Tuesday into precisely this environment, a choice that reflects the central bank’s growing concern that the labor market could deteriorate more quickly in early 2026 if not supported now.
The chances of the Fed delivering its third interest rate cut of the year tomorrow are 90%, according to the CME FedWatch Fed funds futures index. Economists expect the Fed to deliver a kind of hawkish cut, a move that acknowledges the weakness in hiring but refrains from promising a sustained cutting cycle.
That’s because the tension inside the committee is unusually pronounced. Bank of America economist Aditya Bhave wrote in a research note that Powell is confronting “the most divided committee in recent memory.” Some officials believe unemployment risks are rising and see a compelling case for further accommodation. Others remain convinced that the economy retains enough underlying strength that aggressive easing would be premature and potentially inflationary.
For the Fed, the challenge is to articulate a strategy that acknowledges the unmistakable weakening Zandi has been warning about without assuming that the slowdown has already reached a stage requiring an aggressive response.
For Zandi, the concern is more immediate: that the softening now visible in small-business payrolls, layoff announcements and early demographic stress will eventually coalesce into the layoffs he believes are coming.
“If we’re not in a jobs recession, we’re close,” Zandi said.
Children under 16 can no longer access 10 of the world’s biggest platforms, including Facebook, TikTok and Instagram.
Australia has banned children under 16 from social media in a world-first, as other countries consider similar age-based measures amid rising concerns over its effects on children’s health and safety.
Under the new law, which came into effect at midnight local time on Wednesday (13:00 GMT on Tuesday), 10 of the biggest platforms face $33m in fines if they fail to purge Australia-based users younger than 16.
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The law has been criticised by major technology companies and free speech campaigners, but praised by parents and child advocates.
The Australian government says unprecedented measures are needed to protect children from “predatory algorithms” filling phone screens with bullying, sex and violence.
“Too often, social media isn’t social at all,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said in advance of the ban.
“Instead, it’s used as a weapon for bullies, a platform for peer pressure, a driver of anxiety, a vehicle for scammers and, worst of all, a tool for online predators.”
The law states that Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, Snapchat and Reddit are forbidden from creating or keeping accounts belonging to users in Australia under 16.
Streaming platforms Kick and Twitch are also on the government’s blacklist, as are message boards Threads and X. Popular apps and websites such as Roblox, Pinterest and WhatsApp are currently exempt – but the government has stressed that the list remains under review.
Meta, YouTube and other social media giants have already condemned the ban.
YouTube, in particular, has attacked the law, describing it as “rushed” and saying it would only push children into deeper, darker corners of the internet.
While most platforms have begrudgingly agreed to comply, for now, legal challenges are in the wind.
Online discussion site Reddit said Tuesday it could not confirm local media reports that said it would seek to overturn the ban in Australia’s High Court.
The Sydney-based internet rights group Digital Freedom Project has already launched its own bid to have teenagers reinstated to social media.
Some parents, tired of seeing children stuck to their phones, see the ban as a relief.
Father-of-five Dany Elachi said the restrictions were a long-overdue “line in the sand”.
“We need to err on the side of caution before putting anything addictive in the hands of children,” he told the AFP news agency.
The Australian government concedes the ban will be far from perfect at the outset, and canny teenagers will find ways to circumvent it.
Social media companies bear the sole responsibility for checking users are 16 or older.
Some platforms say they will use AI tools to estimate ages based on photos, while young users may also choose to prove their age by uploading a government ID.
There is keen interest in whether Australia’s sweeping restrictions can work as regulators around the globe wrestle with the potential dangers of social media.
Australia’s Communications Minister Anika Wells said last week that the European Commission, France, Denmark, Greece, Romania and New Zealand were also interested in setting a minimum age for social media.
Terry Rozier entered a not-guilty plea Monday in Brooklyn federal court. Prosecutors charged the Miami Heat guard with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and money laundering in connection with an alleged sports-betting scheme.
Rozier secured release on a $3 million bond backed by property. He surrendered his passport and must avoid gambling, weapons, and any contact with co-defendants or witnesses. He also cannot leave South Florida without permission.
Prosecutors Detail the Allegations
Federal investigators claim Rozier joined associates in a plan to profit from bets tied to a March 2023 game. He played for the Charlotte Hornets at the time. Prosecutors say gamblers placed more than $200,000 on prop bets that benefited from low statistical output. Rozier exited that game after about ten minutes and said he suffered a foot injury.
The government collected thousands of pages of records and more than 55 gigabytes of digital material. The case forms part of a broader push to confront illegal sports gambling and suspected organized-crime activity.
League Impact and Policy Questions
The Heat removed Rozier from team activity and placed him on unpaid leave. The National Basketball Players Association responded with a grievance and argued that players should not lose pay before a legal decision.
The investigation also revived questions about NBA trade procedures. Teams must share medical and insurance information during trade calls. They cannot hide any material detail that affects a deal’s fairness. However, current rules do not clearly state whether an active criminal investigation qualifies as required information.
One team executive told ESPN that the Hornets and the league should have disclosed the Rozier probe. Another executive disagreed and said the rules did not obligate either party to reveal an investigation that had not produced charges at the time.
What Comes Next
All six defendants in the case appeared in court for arraignment. A pretrial hearing should take place early next year. Prosecutors plan to turn over large amounts of evidence as discovery continues.
Rozier’s situation now stands as one of the most significant gambling cases in recent NBA history. The outcome may influence how the league handles investigations, trade transparency, and betting-related risks. Teams, players, and league officials are watching closely as the legal process moves forward.
The Tap on the Shoulder: When You’re Suddenly Responsible for “Emerging Trends & Tech”
I’ll never forget the moment it happened — the tap on the shoulder. You know the one. Your manager leans in with that mix of urgency and opportunity in their voice: