Weāve been covering Australiaās monumentally stupid social media ban for kids under 16 since before it went into effect. We noted how dumb the whole premise was, how the rollout was an immediate mess, how a gambling ad agency helped push the whole thing, and how two massive studies involving 125,000 kids found the entire āsocial media is inherently harmfulā narrative doesnāt hold up.
But theory and data are one thing. Now weāre getting real-world stories of actual kids being harmed by a law that was supposedly designed to protect them. And wouldnāt you know it, the harm is falling hardest on the kids who were already most vulnerable. Just like many people predicted.
The Guardian has a deeply frustrating piece about how Australiaās ban is isolating kids with disabilitiesāthe exact population for whom social media often serves as a genuine lifeline.
Meet Indy, a 14-year-old autistic girl who used social media to connect with friends in ways that her disability makes difficult in person:
While some young people were exposed to harmful content and bullying online, for Indy, social media was always a safe space. If she ever came across anything that felt unsafe, she says, she would ask her parents or sisters about it.
āI have autism and mental health things, itās hard making friends in real life for me,ā she says. āMy online friends were easier because I can communicate in my own time and think about what I want to say. My social media was my main way of socialising and without it I feel like Iāve lost my friends.ā
As the article notes, the ban started just as schools in Australia let out for the summer, just when kids would generally use communications systems like social media to stay in touch with friends.
āI didnāt have all my friendsā phone numbers because we mostly talked on Snapchat and Instagram. When I lost everything I all of a sudden couldnāt talk to them at all, thatās made me feel very lonely and not connected,ā she says.
āBeing banned feels unfair because it takes away something that helped me cope, where I could be myself and feel like I had friends who liked me for being myself.ā
This is exactly what critics pretty much across the board warned would happen. Social media isnāt just ādistractionā or āscreen timeā for many young people with disabilitiesāitās their primary social infrastructure.
Advocacy group Children and Young People with Disability Australia (CYDA) says social media and the internet is āoften a lifeline for young people with disability, providing one of the few truly accessible ways to build connections and find communityā.
In a submission to the Senate inquiry around the laws, CYDA said social media was: āa place where young people can choose how they want to represent themselves and their disability and learn from others going through similar thingsā.
āIt provides an avenue to experiment and find new opportunities and can help lessen the sting of loneliness,ā the submission said. āCutting off that access ignores the lived reality of thousands and risks isolating disabled youth from their peer networks and broader society.ā
This goes beyond people with disabilities, certainly, but the damage done to that community is even clearer than with some others. We were among those who warned advocates of an age ban that nearly every study shows social media helps some kids, is neutral for many, and is harmful for some others. The evidence suggests the harmed group is less than 5% of kids. We should do what we can to help those kids, but itās astounding that politicians, advocates, and the media donāt seem to care about those now harmed by these bans:
Isabella Choate , CEO of WAās Youth Disability Network (YDAN), says they are concerned that young people with disability have been disproportionately affected by losing access to online communities. āYoung people with disability are already isolated from community often do not have capacity to find alternative pathways to connection,ā Choate says.
āLosing access to community with no practical plan for supporting young people has in fact not reduced the online risk of harm and has simultaneously increased risk for young peopleās wellbeing.ā
A few years back we highlighted a massive meta study on children and social media that suggested the real issue for kids was the lack of āthird spacesā where kids could be kids. That had pushed many into social media, because they had few unsupervised places where they could just hang out with their friends. Social media became a digitally intermediated third space. And now the adults are taking that away as well.
Ezra Sholl is a 15-year-old Victorian teenager and disability advocate. His accounts have not yet been shut down, but says if they were it would mean ālosing access to a key partā of his social life.
āAs a teenager with a severe disability, social media gives me an avenue to connect with my friends and have access to communities with similar interests,ā Ezra says.
āHaving a severe disability can be isolating, social media makes me feel less alone.ā
Thereās a pattern here: every time kids find a space to gatherāmalls, arcades, now social mediaāa moral panic emerges and policymakers move to shut it down. Itās almost as if adults just donāt want kids to gather with each other anywhere at all. But the kids still figure out ways to gather.
As Ezra notes in that Guardian piece, most kids are just⦠bypassing the whole thing anyway:
But he adds that many of his friends have also evaded the ban, either because their original account was not picked up in age verification sweeps or because they started a new one.
āThose that were asked to prove their age just did facial ID and passed, others werenāt asked at all and werenāt kicked off,ā Ezra says.
So the kids who follow the rules, or whose parents enforce them, lose their support networks. The kids who figure out the trivially easy workarounds keep right on using social media. And the politicians get to take victory laps about āprotecting childrenā while the most vulnerable kids pay the price.
It doesnāt seem like a very good system.
Remember, this is the same Australia where that recent study found social mediaās relationship with teen well-being is U-shapedāmoderate use is associated with the best outcomes, while no use (especially for older teenage boys) is associated with worse outcomes than even heavy use. Australiaās ban is taking kids who might have been moderate users with good outcomes and forcing them into the āno useā category that the research associates with worse well-being. Even if youāre cautious about inferring causation from that correlation, it should, at minimum, give policymakers pause before assuming that less social media automatically means better outcomes.
And yet, the folks who pushed this ban remain unrepentant. The Guardian quotes Dany Elachi, founder of the Heads Up Alliance (one of the parent groups that advocated for the ban), taking credit for starting the ādebateā and saying that itās a āwinā in his book that kids are suffering now, because⦠thatās part of the debate, I guess?
āSo the fact that this was a debate that was front and centre for over a year means that the message got through to every parent in the country, and from that perspective alone I count it as a win,ā Elachi says. āWhat happens further from that is a bonus, we are trying to change the social norm and that takes years.ā
Heās essentially shrugging off the actual harms as collateral damage, which is quite incredible, because you know that he would be screaming loudly about it if any tech company ever suggested any harms to kids on social media were collateral damage.
āUltimately we donāt want to have platforms policing what is going on, we just want parents themselves to say āthis is not good for youā to their twelve or thirteen year old children, and saying the new standard is that we donāt get on social media until weāre 16 ā just like we donāt think twice about not giving cigarettes to kids any more or about not giving them alcohol to drink in early teens.ā
Right. Except the law doesnāt let parents make that call. It makes it for them. Thatās⦠the entire point of the ban. Parents who think their autistic kid benefits from social media connections donāt get to decide their kid can keep using it. The government has decided for them.
This is what happens when you build policy on moral panic instead of evidence. You end up with a law that:
Cuts off support networks for kids with disabilitiesDoes nothing about the kids who just bypass itIgnores the actual research on what helps and harms young peopleWas pushed by an advertising agency that makes gambling adsLets politicians claim victory while vulnerable kids suffer
But sure, think of the children.
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