Australian Cyberbullying Hits Concerning Level: eSafety Commissioner

Australian Cyberbullying Hits Concerning Level: eSafety Commissioner

CANBERRA, Jan 23 (NNN-AAP) – Online bullying among Australian children, has reached a concerning level, the nation’s eSafety commissioner warned, today.

The office of the commissioner said, it probed over 1,680 cyberbullying complaints and asked social media companies to remove offensive content, more than 500 times in the past year.

Today marked one year since the Online Safety Act came into effect, giving the eSafety commission additional powers to prevent online harm.

Under the legislation, Commissioner Julie Inman Grant, can issue a cyberbully with a notice requiring them to remove abusive content, stop their actions or apologise to their victims.

Those who do not comply can be hit with court injunctions or fines.

At the time, then Communications Minister, Paul Fletcher, declared that the new laws would make the internet safer for all Australians, by holding perpetrators accountable.

Despite the new powers, Grant said, bullying complaints increased 69 percent in 2022, in a “post-pandemic surge.”

“We are seeing the tenor and tone of this youth-driven cyberbullying content escalating to concerning levels,” she said in a statement.

In addition to investigating complaints, the commissioner’s office is also preparing for emerging technologies and helping new companies develop safety features.

“We have an opportunity to positively shape the technology landscape, to reduce the potential for harms related to the metaverse, generative AI and quantum environments, all of which are looming in our near future,” Grant said.

“This will help eSafety be a nimble, anticipatory regulator, when these technologies reach full maturity and saturation.”– NNN-AAP  

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