YouTube has outlined three grounds on which it could legally challenge its inclusion in the under-16s social media ban, which is due to come into effect in just over two months.

In July, the federal government reversed an earlier decision to exclude YouTube from the ban, acting on advice from the eSafety commissioner, Julie Inman Grant. The advice was based on research that found 76% of 10 to 15-year-olds had used YouTube, and 37% of children who had seen or heard potentially harmful content online had found it on YouTube .

As reported at the time , YouTube made legal threats to the communications minister, Anika Wells, in a letter outlining the company’s concerns over the change of policy. Guardian Australia has now obtained a copy of the letter under freedom of information laws,

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