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eSafety Commissioner says she's received death threats over social media ban

The eSafety commissioner has endured significant online threats since implementing the ban, but says they only encourage her to "dig in".

A woman looks at the camera with a serious expression on her face.

eSafety boss Julie Inman Grant says her abusers have made her more determined to succeed. Source: AAP / Dominic Giannini

In brief

  • eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant says she's been doxed and experienced death threats following the social media ban.
  • She believes the abuse is gendered and says regulators may require security protections.

As more women take on public leadership and regulatory roles, Australia's first eSafety commissioner warns they could require security protections similar to elected parliamentarians due to plausible online threats made against them.

Julie Inman Grant made history when she was appointed to lead Australia's eSafety Commission in 2017, a world-first government regulatory body dedicated to keeping citizens safer online.

She has driven significant regulatory reform, including developing industry standards to address illegal content, age-restricted material and emerging AI harms online.

But it is in leading the implementation of Australia's landmark social media ban, which delays children's access until they are 16, that Inman Grant herself has endured the most significant online threats.

Following the ban announcement, billionaire Elon Musk, who owns social media platform X, made a public post calling Inman Grant a "censorship commissar".

Within 24 hours, 75,000 posts had been directed at her, 80 per cent of which were toxic, harmful and plausible death threats.

Speaking to Australia's first female prime minister Julia Gillard as part of gender equality conference Women Deliver, Inman Grant said she had been doxed and had deepfakes and death threats made against her.

Julia Gillard sitting on a grey sofa, speaking into a microphone. Across from her is Julie Inman Grant, also sitting on a grey chair and speaking into a microphone.
Julie Inman Grant (right) detailed the hostility she's encountered as eSafety regulator to Julia Gillard. The pair spoke during the Women Deliver 2026 Conference. Source: AAP / Joel Carrett

The pair's conversation was part of a live recording for Gillard's podcast, A Podcast of One's Own.

"It is gendered and it is designed to wear you down, just like any other form of sexualised, violent online abuse that plays upon gendered standards," she said.

"My issue is when they dox my children and my family members ... it makes you sit back and go, am I putting my family and my kids in danger, and how do I protect them?"

Doxing is a form of online harassment where an individual's private information such as their home address, phone number or photos are published without their consent.

Inman Grant noted there were security protections for elected officials, who can face similar threats due to their work, but not the same for regulators.

"There are protections — and I support them — provided to elected members of parliament, but there aren't the same protections provided to regulators like myself," she said.

"I'm kind of a new case, because I guess there aren't that many regulators around the world that have been issued a dog whistle from Elon Musk.

"It comes with a cost, but what (perpetrators) don't realise is: the more they target me, the more I dig in."

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3 min read

Published

Source: AAP




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