Blog

Visual Literacy Is the New Reading Level, and Most Adults Are Behind

A librarian running media literacy workshops told me the most common reaction in the room is not confusion. It is embarrassment. Adults who read confidently and critically for decades are discovering they cannot reliably tell a real photo from a generated one, and they feel foolish about it in a way that surprises them. That reaction points at something worth naming directly. Reading, as a skill, got centuries of institutional investment: schools, libraries, standardized tests, an entire cultural infrastructure built around teaching people to interrogate a written sentence before trusting it. Images never got the equivalent infrastructure, mostly because a

The Age-Verification Trade-Off: What Democracies Are Giving Up for Online Safety

A civil liberties lawyer put it to me plainly: the fastest-growing threat to anonymous speech right now is not a censorship law. It is a child safety law that everybody, including her, mostly wants to see succeed. That tension is the actual story of free expression policy in 2026. A wave of age-verification requirements has moved from proposal to enforcement across a range of jurisdictions, aimed at a genuinely serious problem: minors accessing harmful content and predatory platforms with no meaningful friction in the way. The friction point worth examining is what these laws require of adults in the process