100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

100% Locally Owned, Independent and Free

Jane Stephens: just remember, the internet will always remember your youthful indiscretions

Do you have a news tip? Click here to send to our news team.

Future of boats uncertain with anchoring rules to tighten further

Upwards of 100 vessels are moored in a Sunshine Coast river where further anchoring restrictions are to be implemented next month. Maritime Safety Queensland has More

Group urges Olympic funding boost for local sports

A Sunshine Coast community group that champions grassroots sport says local clubs deserve to benefit from the 2032 Games. The Sunshine Coast Region 2032 Sports More

Coast is clearer: plastic pollution drops

Fewer plastic wrappers and bottle tops are turning up on Sunshine Coast beaches, according to a CSIRO study. The trend is nationwide, with coastal litter More

Gardening event sprouts into new era with fresh name

An annual gardening event that attracts more than 40,000 people has been rebranded. The Queensland Garden Expo has been recast as the Queensland Garden Show, More

Photo of the day: beach vibes

“It was a beautiful sky this morning at Mooloolaba Beach,” writes Helen Browne. If you have a photo of the day offering, email photo@sunshinecoastnews.com.au. Photos More

Ashley Robinson: great parenting smackdown

I saw a Facebook post flying around last week about kids growing up back in my day (50s, 60s and 70s), playing in the More

In the future, will we regret that Facebook post, that clever quip on Twitter or that hot-headed retort sent in a fit of such fury that the keyboard almost caught fire?

Consider the recent case of poor English fast bowler Ollie Robinson, who had a searing debut for his country against New Zealand, taking four wickets in the first innings, three in the second and scoring a handy number of runs.

It was a dashing start for a rising star, except that Robinson has now been sent packing from the English camp after a handful of puerile social media posts he made at age 18 and 19 were disinterred. They were racist, sexist silliness – the kind young men post to humour their mates.

But they were enough for the England and Wales cricket board to suspend him from all international cricket, pending the outcome of a disciplinary investigation.

It is hard to imagine that many of the younger generation will escape their formative years without doing something dumb or inappropriate – whether in word, image or laughing at or otherwise supporting someone else who does these. And they will do it on the internet, where nothing ever really disappears.

While we can talk all we like about being mindful of their future, how many 18-year-olds are living as if they will be squarely in the international spotlight in nine years’ time? Not many, I say.

And not many can imagine how something they think is witty today will be interpreted let alone seen through their own adult eyes. Robinson found that out the hard way.

Do you have an opinion to share? Submit a Letter to the Editor with your name and suburb at Sunshine Coast News via: news@sunshinecoastnews.com.au

As George W. Bush said ‘When I was young and stupid, I was young and stupid’.

Digital natives have it tough where past behaviour is concerned and it is only going to get tougher. They are the first generation to have a life so meticulously documented in a public space.

But they can’t say they didn’t know – they are instructed and warned at every turn about being responsible for what they post, their online interactions, their responsibilities to each other.

It is ingrained in every message they get from the authoritative world: police warn about sexting, schools warn about bullying, their mums warn them about posting pictures that feature a dearth of clothing.

But still the power of the peer and the smell of teen spirit is stronger.

Cases of adolescent stupidity and insensitivity is vastly different from full-grown adults doing dumb things and sharing it with the world.

Examples include a Victorian truck driver, who three years ago recorded himself having a ‘breakfast’ of what looked to be illegal drugs in the cabin of a truck – all while wearing his transport company’s polo shirt.

Or the man punching an injured kangaroo into unconsciousness as his friends egged him on and laughed. Snapchat can be a horror show.

There is no excuse for such idiocy or cruelty, no matter how sorry a person is afterwards or how much they try to remove the post.

The internet might be endless, but its bounds are not. Nothing is ever lost and everything is within the bounds of the law.

And if social media has helped build a person’s profile, it can also tear them down.

The internet remembers everything. Just ask Ollie Robinson.

Jane Stephens is a USC journalism lecturer, media commentator and writer. The views expressed are her own.

Subscribe to SCN’s free daily news email

Hidden
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
[scn_go_back_button] Return Home
Share