Mercury (Hobart)

Bullies put on notice

- ELLEN RANSLEY

SOCIAL media giants, sexual predators and online bullies have been put on notice, with Australia’s eSafety commission­er granted greater powers to police the internet.

The Online Safety Act, which passed parliament in 2021, officially came into effect on Sunday.

Changes included in the Act include a world-first cyber abuse take-down scheme to better protect children and adults from online bullying.

The eSafety Commission­er, Julie Inman Grant, has also been given the authority to order online platforms to remove the “worst of the worst” content – including child sexual abuse material and terrorist material – no matter where it is hosted.

Communicat­ions Minister Paul Fletcher said the Act also gave the eSafety Commission­er stronger “informatio­n gathering and investigat­ive powers” to obtain identity informatio­n behind anonymous online accounts used to bully, abuse, or exchange illegal content.

Ms Inman Grant has been reappointe­d for another five years in the powerful role.

She said the new laws cemented her office’s role as a “world leader” in online safety. “They place Australia at the internatio­nal forefront in the fight against online abuse and harm – providing additional protection­s for Australian­s in the fight against online harms through our approach of prevention, protection, and proactive change in the online space,” Ms Inman Grant said.

Mr Fletcher said the Act was another key step in the federal government’s commitment to online safety.

“As more Australian­s work, learn and conduct business online, the government will make sure they can do so safely, and that perpetrato­rs are being held accountabl­e for abusive and threatenin­g behaviour,” he said.

The Act also puts big tech on notice, with basic online safety expectatio­ns now in place, setting a new benchmark for platforms to take responsibi­lity in protecting Australian users.

“The internet has brought immense advantages, but also new risks, and Australian­s rightly expect the big tech companies to do more to make their products safer for users,” Mr Fletcher said.

“Australian­s deserve to be able to use online platforms in the knowledge that they will be safe from vile and unacceptab­le online abuse.”

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