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Australia’s teen social media ban is a flop. But there’s no joy in ‘I told you so’

21 0
01.04.2026

This week, it was revealed that despite the Australian government’s world-first teen social media ban, around seven in 10 children remain on major platforms. What’s more, the eSafety report also shows that there has been no notable change in cyberbullying or image-based abuse reported by children.

For a policy that was touted as the solution to keeping kids safe from harm online, this is a damning indictment of the ban’s effectiveness.

Who could possibly have predicted that this wasn’t going to work? Well, lots of people.

Countless experts were ignored, including those in the fields of digital wellbeing, digital rights advocacy, youth mental health and more than 140 academics and 20 Australian civil society organisations. Even the eSafety commissioner herself had doubts, and internally the government was aware of a lack of evidence to support the ban, before they passed the legislation anyway.

I’ve written in the past about some of the ban’s troubles, including the problem of ignoring many young people’s experiences of being online, and the poor policymaking process behind the ban. But there is very little joy in saying “I told you so” when the outcome leaves children - and indeed........

© The Guardian