Before the pandemic,my average daily screen time was three-and-a-half hours. Over the past eight months,that's nearly doubled. So I turned to psychology experts for their advice.
One NRL star's horrifying experience - the distribution of a porn video shot eight years ago - is a cautionary tale for anyone who shares their personal life so it can be shared on the internet:it can come back to haunt them.
Social media is not going anywhere. We need to learn how to live with it. And we need to teach our children how to live with it too.
Digital government services will get significant upgrades in the federal budget,including face verification technology.
As we wrestle a pandemic,online communities are proving crucial. But can humans behave well enough to avoid them becoming toxic pits of competing agendas and personality disputes?
Doing a jigsaw puzzle not only keeps boredom at bay,it offers a host of other benefits.
Parents are being reminded to speak to their children about online safety after a man was charged with sexually assaulting a girl he met on social media.
Almost a million Twitter accounts were suspended for posting child exploitation material last year.
Dangerous,harmful and fake content spread via Facebook,YouTube,Instagram and Twitter is an increasing problem for advertisers and users,new data reveals.
Teens have enthusiastically embraced their power to'deplatform'social media stars - but they need guidance to exercise it wisely.
The internet is so firmly woven into the fabric of our daily lives that,for most of us,it is practically unavoidable.