Navigating the Crossroads: GenAI, Youth Online Safety, and the Future of Web3

Do you feel like we’re at a crossroads in what the internet is and how we want it to be in the future? But really, I feel like we are down in the weeds, trying to thrash out the details on a minute by minute basis.

Artificial intelligence is argued to reshape our digital landscape, with it being usefully referred to as synthetic media. That stuff is surreal. But sometimes cool. Like isn’t it funny that you could take this post and ask a GenAI tool to make it more spooky, or a fairy tale. Please feel free.

There’s some interesting questions that it gives rise to. For example, how much of our online content is going to actually have any link to our material realities and at what point will it start consuming itself?… and us along with it.

Meanwhile governments continue to grapple with “old” media formats of Web 2.0 and protecting youth online (a risk versus harm debate as danah boyd usefully points out). The intersection of technology and society has never been more complex or consequential. As we stand at this pivotal point, let’s ensure that we are spicing up our opinions about policy and emerging tech trends with expert perspectives.

A shocking perspective, I know. It’s all very emotive, political and important to talk about keeping our kids safe online, however I just wanted to flag a few things. For the debate around the child ban on social media being bandied around by the Australian government currently, I have appreciated the informed commentary by academics and advocates, Tama Leaver, Johnathon Hutchinson and Justine Humphry. If you want to really look at a balanced perspective, they offer it. Just remember that children have digital rights too … and also that if the ban is not enforceable, what impact will it actually have?

For myself, I’ve spent the last year putting all my writing energy into a Web3 case study that unpacks what people care about in the online environment and what the implications are of this for the future of the internet. You ‘ll be able to read all about this from November in my forthcoming book “Insider and Outsider Cultures in Web3″ with Emerald. It was a labour of love and is essentially my wrap up of the last 10 years of research practice talking blockchain, crypto and decentralised technologies pushing at our digital frontiers.

More on this later, this is just a taster post to say, ‘still kicking here’. But I’m probably a bit too busy looking at the impacts of GenAI tools in education and in our schools.