Australia is raising the stakes in its war on harmful online content — and Downing Street is applauding from the sidelines. The Australian government has announced a sharp increase in penalties for social media companies that fail to remove extremist material and child abuse content, with fines now reaching up to 5% of global turnover. The move mirrors the UK’s Online Safety Act, which ministers call the “global gold standard” for internet regulation.
On the surface, this is a story about legislative muscle. But on the streets of Sydney and London, it is a story about trust, fear and the slow erosion of the Wild West internet. Parents I spoke to in Melbourne are cautiously optimistic. “I want my kids to be safe online, but I also wonder if this just means less freedom for everyone,” said one mother outside a school gate. Her ambivalence captures the cultural dilemma: a public desperate for protection but wary of the censor’s hand.
The social dynamics here are fascinating. Both nations are grappling with a similar reckoning: the realisation that tech giants have been allowed to operate as unaccountable sovereign states. The UK’s Online Safety Act, passed after years of parliamentary wrangling, places a duty of care on platforms to protect users from legal but harmful content. Australia’s tougher penalty regime is a logical next step. Yet the British government’s cheerleading feels partly like a defensive posture — desperate to show the act works before critics call it toothless.
Class dynamics also play out. The wealthiest families in both countries can already afford private filters and tailored online environments for their children. The new penalties, in theory, level the playing field. But poorer households, who rely on free platforms and public Wi-Fi, remain most exposed to algorithmic harm. A flat fine doesn’t build digital literacy or provide free mental health support for teens traumatised by online abuse.
There is also a subtle shift in what we expect from government. A decade ago, the idea of the state fining Facebook or TikTok for what users post would have been dismissed as authoritarian. Today, it is normalised, even demanded. This cultural shift from laissez-faire to interventionist digital policy is perhaps the real story. We are witnessing the end of technological exceptionalism — the belief that online spaces should be free from earthly laws.
Yet enforcement remains the Achilles' heel. The UK’s Ofcom has yet to levy a significant fine under the new act. Australia’s eSafety Commissioner has more scalpels but also faces legal pushback from Silicon Valley. The risk is that these laws become symbolic, signalling virtue without changing behaviour. The true test will be whether a platform actually pays up — and whether that changes what teenagers see on their screens.
For now, the government press releases are triumphant. But the human cost remains buried beneath the policy prose. Parents still feel helpless. Teachers still report rising anxiety in classrooms. And young people, the primary targets of this legislation, often feel patronised rather than protected. One teenage activist in London told me: “They keep deciding for us. We want safety, but we also want a say in what safety looks like.” That voice — impatient, demanding nuance — is the one the gold standard risks forgetting.









