Left To Their Own Devices

Left to Our Own Devices

11 snips
Nov 21, 2025
Julie Inman-Grant, Australia's eSafety Commissioner, discusses groundbreaking legislation to ban social media for kids, while Maddie Freeman shares her grassroots initiative, No-So November—a detox movement born from tragedy. Harrison Haynes provides a powerful personal story of recovery from online victimization, emphasizing the importance of real-life community and accountability. They delve into the effectiveness of youth-led solutions in countering online challenges, the complexities of digital regulations, and how individuals are reclaiming their time away from screens.
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ADVICE

Use Shared Accountability To Limit Phones

  • Harrison and his housemates use mutual accountability: locking phones and sharing passcodes to reduce distractions.
  • They remove apps like YouTube and email from phones to guard precious time and focus on relationships.
INSIGHT

Youth Social Media Use Is Declining

  • Social media use peaked in 2022 and declined most steeply among young people, suggesting habits are shifting.
  • This implies generational decisions and cultural change may reduce platform influence without regulation.
ANECDOTE

Charlotte Dawson Case Spurred eSafety Role

  • Julie Inman Grant traced Australia's eSafety office origins to the online abuse and suicide of public figure Charlotte Dawson in 2014.
  • That tragedy helped spur creation of the eSafety Commissioner and new protections against online abuse.
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