Key Points
False theories and graphic content were posted on social platforms following the Bondi Junction attack and the stabbing at a Sydney church.
The government’s misinformation laws had been delayed due to freedom of speech concerns.
Under the laws, tougher penalties would apply for social media companies who fail to remove misleading content from their platforms.
Tougher penalties forcing social media companies to remove misinformation from their platforms need to be rolled out to set a benchmark for the rest of the world, the opposition leader says.
Peter Dutton has backed efforts calling for harsher sanctions to combat misinformation online, after false theories and graphic content were posted to platforms following a Bondi Junction attack.
The incidents have sparked a renewed push for the government’s misinformation laws, which were delayed due to freedom of speech concerns.
Dutton said the coalition was willing to work with the government surrounding the proposal.
“What (social media companies) are worried about is the flow-on to other markets if Australia’s laws are upheld, and that’s all the more reasons, I think, for us to take a stance,” he told the ABC’s Insiders program on Sunday.
“We know that the companies … see themselves (as) above the law and the Australian law should apply equally in the real world as it does online.”
Tougher stance needed
“We are (prepared to back the laws) and happy to look at anything the government puts forward.”
Calls are growing for harsher sanctions for social media platforms in the wake of the 13 April shopping centre massacre at Bondi after distressing footage of the attack was uploaded online and misinformation spread. Source: Getty / NurPhoto
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The requests for the takedowns have also been criticised by X’s owner Elon Musk.
‘Narcissistic billionaires’
Opposition foreign spokesman Simon Birmingham said support for the misinformation laws would depend on the bill’s contents but supported stronger action on social media companies.