Submission to Select Committee on Foreign Interference through Social Media (Submission 19)
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Nicholls, Rob
Tranter, Kieran
Adamson, Greg
Guihot, Michael
Haataja, Samuli
Kim, Heejin
Jacquet, Aurelie
Goltz, Sean
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Abstract
We believe that the challenges presented by foreign interference in elections cannot be addressed without considering broader reforms, including: - Reform of Australia’s data protection laws, including the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) - Curriculum reform, that ensures students are better prepared, as citizens and consumers, to navigate a world where others seek to manipulate their behaviour and target their consumption by exploiting their data - Clarification of Australia’s public position on how international law governs state conduct in cyberspace in relation to foreign interference activities.
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© 2020. The attached file is reproduced here in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. Please refer to the publisher’s website for further information.
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Law in context
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Bennett Moses, L; Nicholls, R; Tranter, K; Adamson, G; Guihot, M; Haataja, S; Kim, H; Jacquet, A; Goltz, S, Submission to Select Committee on Foreign Interference through Social Media (Submission 19), 2020