Home Australia plans fines for Meta, X and others who enable misinformation

Australia plans fines for Meta, X and others who enable misinformation

TLDR

  • Australia’s media regulator can fine tech firms up to 5% of global turnover for misinformation.
  • Social platforms must provide records and face penalties for failing to stop harmful content.
  • Concerns remain over social media companies acting as "arbiters of truth" under the new rules.

Australia’s media regulator will be given the authority to crack down and fine tech companies for misinformation and disinformation on their platforms, it has been revealed. Digital platforms like Meta and X may be subject to civil penalties of up to five percent of global turnover for breaches.

The legislation would give the Australian Communications and Media Authority new powers, where it would be authorized to demand that social platforms keep their records and hand them over.

There will be significant penalties for breaking the law, with companies facing a fine of five percent of their global revenue for failing to prevent the spread of misinformation online, as well as two percent for breaching codes.

Communications Minister Michelle Rowland stated around 75 percent of Australians are concerned about the harmful impacts of misinformation and disinformation. She said: “Digital platforms can also serve as a vehicle for the spread of misleading or false information that is seriously harmful to Australians.

“The rapid spread of seriously harmful mis and disinformation poses a significant challenge to the functioning of societies around the world.”

However, Independent Senator David Pocock expressed concerns that the government was “essentially putting the onus on social media companies to deal with this.”

He added: “I have real concerns about making social media companies the arbiters of truth. Of them deciding what is and what isn’t misinformation. Particularly when they have these algorithms that there’s no transparency. The are boosting things, putting things in front of people and we don’t know how that is actually working.”

X owner Elon Musk, was forthright in his views on Australia’s proposals, labeling the government “fascists” in a post.

Australian government’s crackdown on tech companies

After last year’s draft bill, the federal government is launching laws against doxing, where maliciously sharing someone’s personal details online could lead to a seven-year jail sentence. These legislations respond to increasing online privacy concerns.

This month, Meta executives also returned to the Australian Parliament to address concerns over the company’s news content policies. ReadWrite reported that one executive admitted public data of Australian citizens had been scraped to train AI models.

In July, big tech firms were set a six-month deadline to draft online safety rules to protect children from inappropriate content. Members of the online industry received the instruction from the eSafety Commissioner, giving the deadline of October 3.

Featured image: Canva

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The ReadWrite Editorial policy involves closely monitoring the tech industry for major developments, new product launches, AI breakthroughs, video game releases and other newsworthy events. Editors assign relevant stories to staff writers or freelance contributors with expertise in each particular topic area. Before publication, articles go through a rigorous round of editing for accuracy, clarity, and to ensure adherence to ReadWrite's style guidelines.

Suswati Basu
Tech journalist

Suswati Basu is a multilingual, award-winning editor and the founder of the intersectional literature channel, How To Be Books. She was shortlisted for the Guardian Mary Stott Prize and longlisted for the Guardian International Development Journalism Award. With 18 years of experience in the media industry, Suswati has held significant roles such as head of audience and deputy editor for NationalWorld news, digital editor for Channel 4 News and ITV News. She has also contributed to the Guardian and received training at the BBC As an audience, trends, and SEO specialist, she has participated in panel events alongside Google. Her…

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