What would happen if Australia were to ban social media all together?

what would happen if australia were to ban social media all together?

With platforms like X making headlines, what would life be like if social media was banned? (ABC News)

Governments and social media giants are facing a reckoning.

On one front, the Australian government has called for Elon Musk’s X (formerly known as Twitter) to remove a video of the Wakeley church stabbing from its platform.

On the other, it’s battling Meta to pay for Australian news to be shared on its platforms Facebook and Instagram.

US President Joe Biden has recently signed a bill that would ban TikTok in the United States, citing security concerns, and in China, Facebook and Twitter are among a long list of platforms already banned.

But what would happen if Australia took a similar route and banned social media platforms all together?

Can the Australian government ban social media?

According to business futurist Morris Misel, “anything is possible”, but whether governments would go that far is a different question.

“If there’s a desire to make it happen, it can,” Mr Misel said.

He said part of his work as a futurist was looking at why things were important to humans — and in the case of social media, it was the ability to “peer over the fence” and see how other people lived.

“[It’s] trying to understand what somebody else is doing, trying to use people’s gossip, trying to share news, trying to share information, that at its core, is difficult to make disappear,” he said.

“It seems so ingrained in our society and conversations that we can’t imagine a world without it.

“The core of what it offers, I don’t think we can make this appear [elsewhere].”

Mr Misel said we would never really go back to a time when social media didn’t exist. It would likely just be replaced with something else.

“We may as a society culturally decide we’ve had enough of it and just begin not to use it, but I can’t see that happening,” Mr Misel said.

He said the topic of social media access was “very specific to western countries” and those that had access to the internet.

“Four-point-six billion people on the planet out of 7-point-something billion have access to social media and use it every day.

“But the rest of the world doesn’t have it. They may want it, but they don’t have it and are still managing to go on.”

‘Embedded in our lives’

Lisa Given, a professor of information sciences at RMIT University, said social media had become too entwined in our lives to easily remove it.

“I think it’ll be very, very challenging actually, to completely eliminate social media in the way that we use it today,” Professor Given said.

“An individual platform may disappear the same way we’ve seen MySpace disappear.

“Certain things become more popular, less popular, but something always seems to pop up again to fill the gap.”

Professor Given said technology today had a range of different uses, but social media had one key feature that many people would continue to seek.

“We don’t just use it to look for information or to read a book or to listen to music, we use it to engage with other people and that’s really where it’s become kind of embedded in our lives.”

She said, like technology in general, social media would continue to grow and evolve over time.

“Social media has been around for a very, very long time, even though the types of social media might look different or feel different than they did from the early days.”

What would happen if social media were banned completely?

Mr Misel agreed that banning one platform, such as X, would lead another one to pop up in its place.

“If the government does close it down, does want to get rid of it and somehow succeed in it, it’s a leaky sieve because many people could find a way around it as they do in countries that have tried to do similar things,” he said.

It’s also unlikely society could return to a time when social media was not a part of our daily lives, Mr Misel said.

“Even though we claim nostalgically, romantically that we want to [go back] … we’re just not that kind of a beast,” he said.

Professor Given recalls that when social media wasn’t in full use, communication and the way we lived were very different.

“It took longer, because you didn’t have as easy a way to do that kind of real-time engagement, and to get kind of automatic feedback from people,” she said.

“The challenge now is if every single platform disappeared, what would we do? What would we have left?”

Apart from new platforms generating in place of old ones, other systems of communication would still exist.

“We’d still be dealing with email, with systems like Teams or Zoom to talk to people via video conferencing, we’d still have the ability to text and call,” Professor Given said.

Life would go on, but it seems we won’t be returning to a time before Facebook or X anytime soon.

OTHER NEWS

21 minutes ago

Soap stars raise money for breast cancer charity wearing decorated bras

21 minutes ago

County cricket desperately needs radical thinkers to save game

21 minutes ago

Urgent review as D-Day parachute jump scaled back due to lack of RAF aircraft

21 minutes ago

Robot Dogs to Assist Bomb Squads at Paris 2024 Olympics

21 minutes ago

"The leader he's been for us, not just for me but for us, he's been amazing" - Luka Doncic on Irving's crucial role within the Mavericks locker room

21 minutes ago

Review: Aziz Ansari makes Abu Dhabi Comedy Week debut as a changed man

21 minutes ago

Freeman leads Guardians against the Twins after 4-hit game

21 minutes ago

Finance expert sounds alarm over 'spaving' trend: An old 'trap' with a new name hitting your wallet

21 minutes ago

Premier League Golden Boot standings: Can anyone challenge Erling Haaland?

22 minutes ago

Airbnb carbon monoxide detector mandate would be ‘very hard,’ CEO says, despite deaths

24 minutes ago

Bitter feud between five billionaire brothers takes fresh twist after decades-long war over diamonds and LA property empire tore family apart

26 minutes ago

Rassie Erasmus loses star Springboks prop for Ireland series as injury is worse than expected

26 minutes ago

Congolese army says it has thwarted attempted coup

28 minutes ago

Me and the Voice in My Head, review: Joe Tracini finds humour in the darkest of places

28 minutes ago

Awakening the sleeping giant: How Saudi Arabia plans to attract more foreign tourists

28 minutes ago

Virginia governor allows Confederate groups to keep tax exemptions

28 minutes ago

Leo Cullen frustrated as Leinster's chances of top-two finish diminish

28 minutes ago

The areas in Britain where investors are stockpiling gold

28 minutes ago

Alonso hit with F1 Imola GP pitlane start after Aston Martin changes

28 minutes ago

13 things Costco won't sell anymore

28 minutes ago

Nigel Owens warns the scrum will be ‘gone for good’ after World Rugby’s potentially ‘damaging’ amendment

28 minutes ago

Jeff Bezos convinced his siblings to invest $10K each in his online startup called Amazon and now their stake is worth over $1B — 2 ways to get rich outside of the S&P 500

28 minutes ago

Arne Slot walks into transfer headache as Liverpool star's £60m release clause comes to light

28 minutes ago

The EIGHT SASSA payment grants South Africans can apply for

28 minutes ago

Black Panthers Meet New Hollywood in 'The Big Cigar': Review

28 minutes ago

Children 'failed' by lack of domestic violence support

28 minutes ago

Max Verstappen gave Ferrari fan ‘the finger’ before later applauding him

28 minutes ago

MLB roundup: Marlins score 4 in 9th, sink Mets in 10th

28 minutes ago

'I owe a lot to the show that made me a good dad,' says Operation Transformation winner

30 minutes ago

Genting chairman says open to casino resort development in UAE

31 minutes ago

Companies are trying to attract more smartphone users across Africa. But there are risks

33 minutes ago

McDonald's fans stunned at how much a burger and fries cost you 10 years ago compared to now

33 minutes ago

Meet the foul-mouthed, Left-wing, working-class ex-City trader called Gary who's winning tens of thousands of YouTube followers by claiming HE has the formula for a fairer economy

33 minutes ago

Pictured: New love of Lord Ashcroft's former daughter-in-law Jasmine Hartin who shot and killed top cop in Belize 'by accident' during a drinking session before being spared jail

33 minutes ago

How ultra-wealthy New Yorkers are leasing properties for $100,000 a month despite being able to buy - but brokers say they're tenants from hell with some even stealing the TOILETS

34 minutes ago

100-hour weeks and heart palpitations: Inside Wall Street’s brutal work culture

34 minutes ago

'Amritpal not a Bandi Singh, won't let him mislead youth'

34 minutes ago

Mamelodi Sundowns have DOUBLE Kaizer Chiefs’ log points!

34 minutes ago

Judge says Ohio law banning cities from regulating tobacco sales is unconstitutional

34 minutes ago

RAYE and Ncuti Gatwa named among TIME's 2024 list of Next Generation Leaders

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch