It’s time Anthony Albanese got off X. Elon Musk’s social media platform formerly known as Twitter is repulsive

It’s time Anthony Albanese got off X. Elon Musk’s social media platform formerly known as Twitter is repulsive

The minute the politicians we cover leave the site, I’m gone. Every week I have to wade into that bilge to fish out updates I’d rather get anywhere else: WhatsApp, Instagram, good old-fashioned emails.

Loading

Now would be a great time for the federal government and the opposition to review their use of the platform they condemn.

Posting on X is fast and simple. Governments and parties feel obliged to pump the message through as many channels as possible. But Australia just took a much bigger step, banning every child under the age of 16 from logging into any social media platform.

Julie Inman Grant, Australia’s eSafety commissioner, has been threatened with contempt of US Congress if she doesn’t testify this week before a House committee hearing designed to berate her for trying to stop X showcasing a video of a stabbing motivated by religious hatred.

The Albanese government will soon unveil legislation drafted in the wake of the Bondi killings to tackle hate speech. There is nowhere I can tap that poison faster than on X.

Maybe even last year, the benefits of posting swiftly in a space frequented at least once a month by about 6 million Australians outweighed all the ugliness.

But now that it has enabled child abuse material, X does not deserve traffic driven by government alerts or political statements. As long as it’s still the place to get ministerial updates, the rest of us are stuck with it, and Musk keeps getting away with his global enshittification project.

Time was, Twitter was the best place for important updates about bushfires, blackouts, train cancellations and rolling updates on big stories.

Six years ago it was the best source of news from Mallacoota, when the town was cut off by raging fires and people were posting images as they stood in the ocean and watched the flames advance.

Now those real-time updates are on TikTok, and disaster alerts are more reliably found on emergency service apps or through text updates or by turning on the radio.

Loading

Far more people – 50 per cent of Australians – are on Facebook, which isn’t perfect but it isn’t X. There are dozens of workarounds for getting information to people and some of them do not publish the updates surrounded by artificially enhanced misinformation.

When I first joined 17 years ago, people sneered at Twitter as a place where people posted about what they had for breakfast. That sounds impossibly wholesome these days.

Like all online forums, Twitter always had trolls. I was reporting 15 years ago on lives shattered by defamatory claims and unhinged viciousness. But it didn’t dominate the feed like it does now. In 2026 the trolls have crawled out from under the bridge and they’re running the joint, like orcs in Mordor.

If the government is serious about tackling social media’s worst abuses, it’s time to get out of X. It is no longer fit for purpose.

Michelle Griffin is federal bureau chief for The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald.

Get a weekly wrap of views that will challenge, champion and inform your own. Sign up for our Opinion newsletter.

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *