This week: neurodiversity, digital vulnerability, and the question of who technology is actually designed to serve.
🔍 This week I’ve been thinking about…
This week is Neurodiversity Celebration Week. Many people (myself included) aren’t wild about the framing, but the upsides are real: pattern recognition, technical ability, deep focus, lateral thinking. As anyone who is ND, or has kids with ND traits, knows, though — sometimes those great things don’t feel like fair recompense for living in a world that quite simply doesn’t fit right.
Communication is a core issue. Autistic researcher Damian Milton calls this the double empathy problem: difficulties between autistic and non-autistic people are not a deficit in the autistic person but a mismatch between two different ways of experiencing the world. Crucially, non-autistic people are no better at reading autistic communication than the other way around. The difficulty runs in both directions. Only one side is ever asked to do the work.
Enter the internet. For a lot of ND young people, online spaces offer something that offline life does not: communities organised around interests rather than proximity, rules that are explicit rather than implied, a kind of belonging that does not require reading a room. It’s parallel play writ large. Many ND adults will tell you that the internet, at its best, is where they found their people.
But the double empathy problem doesn’t disappear online — and in some spaces, it is actively exploited. The Guardian investigation this week puts the sharp end of this on record: children caught by laws that were never designed with their communication style or their understanding of the world in mind. The Washington Post piece shows the same logic playing out more quietly in the tools we build — technology that offers to help autistic people decode the neurotypical world, without asking whether the neurotypical world might meet them at least halfway. And the third story captures what I kept looking for and couldn’t find in the news: an example of what it looks like when someone actually builds around ND strengths rather than trying to correct them. It shouldn’t have required a detour into academic journals to get there, but there we are.
📰 Three things worth your attention
1. Children as young as 10 are being charged with possessing violent extremist material — The Guardian
A Guardian Australia investigation has uncovered court records showing that many of the children charged under Australia’s 2023 counter-terrorism law have an autism diagnosis, language challenges, or both. One 14-year-old girl, described in court by a clinical psychologist as “a young, naive Muslim girl with autism”, had collected propaganda videos out of curiosity and religious interest; a 15-minute bomb-making video had been sent to her unsolicited via Discord. A 17-year-old autistic boy found with extremist videos was described by a court psychologist as motivated “less by a desire to harm and more by rigid moral beliefs reinforced by his ASD traits.” These are not cases where the law is catching dangerous children. They are cases where the law is catching vulnerable ones. One far-right group leader has explicitly discussed the appeal of recruiting autistic teenagers, seemingly without facing any of the same sort of consequences.
2. AI is helping autistic people with social mishaps — The Washington Post (🔒 paywalled)
This Washington Post feature profiles Autistic Translator, an AI tool designed to help autistic people decode confusing social interactions: the ones where someone says one thing and means another, or where a job appears to be going well until it suddenly isn’t. The tool fills a genuine gap. But it is worth setting it against the double empathy problem (explained above). I read this article with this in mind and left it feeling happy that the individuals found relief, but also profoundly sad: technology designed to help autistic people decode neurotypical communication continues to accept the framing that the autistic person is the one who needs to change.
3.Strengths-based Cybersecurity Education and Training Program for Autistic Adolescents – Rumsa et al., Neurodiversity
I went looking for a news story to end on something more hopeful. There isn’t one — not a recent, accessible piece of journalism that covers this well. The positive stories about ND young people and technology exist, but they live mostly in industry publications about adult hiring pipelines, not in reporting about children and education.
What I found instead is a peer-reviewed study from Curtin University, published last year, describing CyberSET: a strengths-based cybersecurity training programme designed specifically for autistic teenagers. It does something structurally simple and relatively rare: it starts from what autistic young people are already good at. Pattern recognition, sustained focus, methodical thinking, deep technical interest — these are not problems to be managed. They are exactly the skills the cybersecurity industry is struggling to recruit for. Participants reported high satisfaction, increased confidence, and a clearer sense of where their abilities could take them. A massive win!
🔁 ICYMI
Ctrl+Alt+Chaos: How Teenage Hackers Hijack the Internet — Joe Tidy (Waterstones | Amazon | Blackwell’s)
Joe Tidy is the BBC’s first cyber correspondent. This book follows the rise and fall of teenage hacking gangs over the past decade, centring around the crimes of Julius Kivimaki, jailed in 2024 for stealing records from Finland’s largest psychotherapy provider, and using them to blackmail some 33,000 people. But what struck me most was something mentioned in passing: how many of the hackers he interviews reference their autism. Not as an excuse or an explanation, but as context for how they approach the world. The ethical frame is not absent so much as differently structured. Hacking is a matter of technical skill. If your data is unsecured, that is your problem.
That framing sits directly alongside everything else in this issue. Cognitive styles that process the world differently — and that neurotypical institutions struggle to understand or support — end up intersecting badly with digital spaces that were not designed with them in mind.
🔬 What’s new with CAISE
Ethics approval revisions came back this week. They were minor (hurrah!), and the updated application has been resubmitted.
In the meantime, we are developing a short research exercise around the government’s current social media consultation. Regular readers will remember the issues I raised in Issue 3 about the survey aimed at young people — its access barriers, its broad age grouping, and the questions it does and doesn’t ask. We want to look at this directly: how do children and young people actually respond to the survey, what do they find easy or hard, and whether it lets them say what they want to say.
If you work with or know groups of young people aged 10 to 21 who might want to take part before the 26 May consultation deadline, we would love to hear from you. Get in touch.
→ What are you seeing in your school, your research, or your own use of AI this week?
Let me know — or share this with someone who is trying to figure it out.

