Report
Trends in exposure to fringe and radical content and groups online
Publisher
Digital platforms
Digital media
Comparative studies
Radicalisation
Extremists
Cyber safety
Violence
Technology social aspects
Australia
Resources
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Trends in exposure to fringe and radical content and groups online | 1.01 MB |
Description
This report builds on earlier research by the Australian Institute of Criminology and provides an updated national picture of exposure to fringe and radical content and groups among a large sample of online Australians. Results from a survey of 9,951 respondents conducted in late 2024 were compared with the results of a similar survey conducted in late 2022.
The report shows that fringe and radical content remains readily available on mainstream social media platforms and that Australian internet users are regularly exposed to violent content.
Key findings
- A significant number of online Australians were exposed to fringe and radical content online in 2024.
- Results showed that the rate of exposure to fringe and radical content and groups was lower than in 2022, as was the proportion of people who intentionally sought out the content.
- However, respondents were much more likely to say they had seen content depicting, describing or advocating for violence and content calling for violent action.
- Respondents who intentionally viewed fringe and radical content did so more frequently and persistently in 2024 than in 2022.
- Algorithmic suggestions from social media platforms played an increasingly important role in first time and repeated exposure in 2024.
Publication Details
Copyright:
Australian Institute of Criminology 2026
License type:
CC BY
Access Rights Type:
open
Post date:
2 Jul 2026
