Our Story

The Digital Resilience Project began with people.

People we knew. People we cared about. People who quietly asked for help. These people were friends. Colleagues. Family members. Professionals. Students. Parents. They were different ages, came from different backgrounds, cultures, and careers. 

What they shared was an experience. Technology had been used against them in abusive relationships. Through coercive control. Through sextortion. This abuse wasn’t caused by their personal weakness, poor choices, or some inherent vulnerability. It was created by complex systems, power imbalances, and technology that was misused in ways most people never imagined.

When many of them sought help, they discovered a gap. There were plenty of services which understood domestic and family violence and plenty of professionals who understood cybersecurity. But few sat in the space between.

So, we built a capability. We gathered analysts, cyber specialists, investigators, engineers, and intelligence professionals. People used to solving hard problems. People who believe their skills should serve others.

Today, we stand alongside survivors as trusted guides – helping them to understand, reduce risk, and reclaim control of their digital lives. We do this because safety shouldn’t depend on technical knowledge. Because no one should face digital harm alone.

And because when expertise meets empathy, resilience becomes possible.

THE DRAGONFLY: A SYMBOL OF RESILIENCE AND RENEWAL

Our Team

Our Founders

Our Board

Andrew provides trusted senior-level advice on cyber governance, artificial intelligence and quantum strategy, supporting organisations to navigate an increasingly complex and contested global technology landscape.

“It is a privilege to lead the Board of an organisation committed to such vital and deeply human work. At the Digital Resilience Project, we stand alongside people experiencing technology-facilitated abuse, helping restore a sense of safety, control and independence through care that is ethical, trauma-informed and grounded in dignity. At the same time, we are working to prevent harm before it takes hold, building a more resilient and compassionate digital environment for all.

Sarah’s advocacy is grounded in lived experience. After surviving a relationship marked by extreme control – including the discovery of a tracking device in her car and attempts to mirror her phone – she moved from survival to systemic advocacy.

Alongside this work, Sarah has built a scientific career, beginning in virology at CSIRO and progressing through leadership roles at Millennium Science, BasePair Genomics, and Merck Life Science. She is also a science communicator through her platform, Fardy Facts, translating complex topics for a broad audience.