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May 23, 2025

Disaster or digital spectacle? The dangers of using floods to create social media content

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Almost had been carried out in New South Wales by Friday morning as pounds the state. Tragically, in floodwaters.

Amid the chaos, videos posted on social media show people deliberately entering or standing above swollen rivers and flooded roads. It is a pattern of dangerous behavior that occurs frequently during natural disasters in Australia.

Filming unsafe acts for social media is not just risky for participants. It may inspire copycat behavior, and, if things go wrong, can endanger the lives of rescuers. It's a which requires new remedies.

Selfies in floods: A risky business

During a flood, water can be deceiving. Just 15cm of water can or cause a car to lose traction and float. Submerged debris and contaminated water add to the dangers.

Emergency services routinely warn the public not to enter floodwaters—on foot or in vehicles. But many people ignore the warnings, including those out to create social media content.

In a startling example posted on Tiktok during the current floods, a young man stands on a mossy log which has fallen over a flooded river. The video, accompanied by dramatic music, shows swirling floodwaters surging beneath him. One wrong step, and the man could easily have drowned.

In other examples in recent days, a woman wades through murky floodwaters, and a person films as the car they are traveling in .

Similar behavior was observed during earlier this year. Residents filmed themselves diving and floodwaters, and .

And during ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred, social media was of people in Queensland surfing dangerous swells and wading in rough surf.

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A worrying trend

Our explores the links between social media and adverse health outcomes.

has become a public health concern. People are increasingly venturing off-trail, seeking out attractive but hazardous locations such as and .

These behaviors can lead to injury and death. They can also put emergency services personnel in harm's way. In 2021, for example, a on Canberra's outskirts while trying to take a selfie with friends, prompting a police official to warn: "There is no photo or social media post that is worth risking your life to get. Any water rescue puts the lives of not only of yourself but those of emergency services personnel at risk."

Getting to grips with the problem

How should the problem be tackled? has recommended "no-selfie zones," barriers, and signs as ways to prevent selfie incidents. But these measures may not be enough.

The phenomenon of selfie-related incidents requires a . This entails addressing the behavior through prevention, education, and other interventions such as via social media platforms.

In the latest floods, unsafe behavior has occurred despite . Residents also continue to drive into floodwaters, despite repeated .

Official warnings compete with—and can lose out to—more emotionally compelling, visually rich content. If the public sees other people behaving recklessly and apparently unharmed, then even clear, fact-based warnings can be ignored.

This is especially true in communities experiencing "" after having gone through disasters before.

Sometimes, vague terminology in warnings means the messages don't necessarily cut through. We've seen this before in relation to surf safety. Technical phrases such as "hazardous swell" don't change behavior if people don't understand what they mean.

For warnings to work, they need to be clear and provide instruction—stating what the danger actually is, and what to explicitly do, or not do.

For , that might mean spelling out not to go into floodwaters to capture content for social media.

We've also previously called on social media companies to they publish—by flagging risky content and supporting in-app safety messaging, especially at high-risk locations or during .

What to do right now

If you're in or near a flood zone, follow guidance from to keep yourself and your loved ones safe.

When it comes to using social media in an emergency:

As extreme weather becomes more frequent in Australia under , so too will the urge to document them. But we risk turning disasters into digital spectacles—at the expense of our lives and that of rescuers.

Provided by The Conversation

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Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

Creating social media content during floods often involves dangerous behavior, such as entering floodwaters, which can result in injury or death and endanger rescuers. Such acts may encourage copycat incidents and undermine official safety warnings. Addressing this public health issue requires prevention, education, clearer warnings, and greater accountability from social media platforms.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.