Online privacy
Submission
ADM+S submission to the Safe and responsible AI in Australia discussion paper
Nataliya Ilyushina, Jenny Kennedy, Jackie Leach Scully, Dennis Leeftink, Suvradip Maitra, Rita Matulionyte, Anthony McCosker, Robert Mullins, Kelsie Nabben, Christine Parker, Thao Phan, Flora Salim, Aaron Snoswell, Julian Thomas, Melanie Trezise, Libby Young, Jacky Zeng
This submission from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society seeks to distil what is (arguably) new and/or different about recent developments in automated decision-making (ADM) and AI technologies, and their legal, social, human and environmental impacts.
Report
Young people and online privacy: realising young people’s rights in the digital environment
Young people hold nuanced and sophisticated understandings about what privacy means in a digital context. This report documents findings of mixed methods research undertaken with young people across Australia aged 13-18 between 2022 and 2023. It documents themes that emerged across a wide range of research activities and outputs, and prioritises the words of young...
Report
Surveillance for sale
The United States and foreign government agencies can acquire sensitive personal information, like smartphone geolocation records, from data brokers. The author of this paper argues that stricter privacy protections are necessary to strengthen U.S. national security, human rights and economic interests.
Report
Implementing Australia’s AI ethics principles: a selection of responsible AI practices and resources
This report explores some of the practical steps needed to implement the Australian government’s eight AI ethics principles, explaining each practice and its organisational context, including the roles that are key to successful implementation.
Report
Rewiring the web: the future of personal data
In this paper, the authors argue that the widespread use of personal information online represents a fundamental flaw in the digital infrastructure that enables staggeringly high levels of fraud, undermines people's right to privacy, and limits competition. This paper proposes a series of technical, regulatory, and institutional interventions that reimagine the foundations of a modern...