Online Safety stories
Parents of primary school children are being urged to rethink online privacy habits as the regulator responds to rising safety concerns.
Employers could face faster detection of illegal content on staff devices as the new tool flags known abuse material without exposing reviewers to images.
A misconfigured database left 86,859 images and private chats from a prominent European celebrity’s device open to anyone online.
Thousands of motorists and households face fake toll and fine texts that can steal card details and personal data if they click the links.
Rising breaches and weak credential habits are forcing businesses to adopt passkeys, multi-factor authentication and tighter access controls.
Travellers face fake payment requests tied to genuine hotel bookings, with exposed reservation data making the messages harder to spot.
Businesses and shoppers are being urged to spot fake sites before clicking, as phishing pages and scam shops fuel rising fraud losses.
Fans face a higher risk of phishing as most FIFA World Cup 2026 partners still lack the strict email checks that block spoofed messages.
Households facing rising AI fraud risks are the target of a new family assistant as the firm shifts its consumer unit around digital safety.
Employers face a rising risk of criminal probes and reputational damage as new scans flag illegal child abuse imagery on work devices.
Most firms lack formal bias controls, leaving 2SLGBTQI+ users less well served by AI systems than the wider public.
Fewer Australian scam reports still cost victims more in 2025, with total losses climbing to AUD $295.4 million and phishing damage surging.
Growing use of age-check tools and AI is forcing Australian regulators to coordinate more closely on child safety and personal data.
Bias in AI systems could widen unless more women help shape the technology from the start, the Inde Women's Network warns.
Greater use of two-factor authentication and password managers has helped cut the share of adults reporting cyber harm to 27% from 36%.
Most Australians want AI-made content clearly labelled, as 89% back tougher regulation and 62% warn of damaged trust from deception.
Australian platforms facing tougher age-check rules can now verify users through bank data, without collecting passports or licences.
Public profile details are helping criminals guess passwords and impersonate contacts, with 55% of Australians reusing the same password.
Privacy watchdog concerns raise fresh doubts over whether the government’s age assurance trial overstated vendor compliance and safeguards.
Gemini-powered screening helped Google catch more than 99% of policy-violating ads before users saw them, as scams grew more complex.