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Australia to fine Apple, Meta, Microsoft over anti-abuse strategies

The fine could be as much as A$555,000 ($383,000). daily

• August 30, 2022

An Australian regulator sent legal letters to Facebook owner Meta Platforms, Apple Inc, and Microsoft Corp., demanding they share their strategies for stamping out child abuse material on their platforms or face fines.

The eSafety Commissioner, a body set up to protect internet users, said it used laws which took effect in January to compel the technology giants to disclose measures they were taking to detect and remove abusive material within 28 days.

If they did not, the companies would each face a daily fine of A$555,000 ($383,000).

The threat underscores Australia’s hardline approach to regulating big tech firms since 2021. It has so far included laws forcing them to pay media outlets for displaying their content and laws making them hand over details of anonymous accounts which post defamatory material.

The firms have been under pressure around the world to find a way to monitor encrypted messaging and streaming services for child abuse material without infringing on user privacy.

“This activity is no longer confined to hidden corners of the dark web but is prevalent on the mainstream platforms our children and we use every day,” said Commissioner Julie Inman Grant.

Ms Grant added, “As more companies move towards encrypted messaging services and deploy features like live streaming, the fear is that this horrific material will spread unchecked on these platforms.” 

A spokesperson for Microsoft, which owns video calling service Skype, said the company had received the letter and planned to respond within 28 days.

Also, Meta spokesperson, which also owns messaging service WhatsApp, said the company was still reviewing the letter but continued to “proactively engage with the eSafety Commissioner on these important issues.”

Apple, which owns video messaging service FaceTime, iMessage and photo storing service iCloud, did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.

The eSafety Commissioner referred to figures provided by the U.S. National Centre for Missing & Exploited Children, which said it had received 29.1 million reports of child abuse material from internet companies, of which just 160 were from Apple while 22 million were from Facebook. 

(Reuters/NAN) 

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