
AI bombardment of spam emails is out of control
Inbox's are into their 1000's of unread emails.
AMA President Dr Danielle McMullen said online gambling was causing immeasurable harm to Australian families.
"The committee led by Peta Murphy was crystal clear partial bans do not work,
and it is time to recognise that ongoing industry pressure is harming Australians," Dr McMullen said.
"While families struggle with cost-of-living pressures, gambling losses now amount to more than $1500 for every adult,
draining budgets faster than utilities or housing."
Australians lose $31.5 billion annually to gambling — the highest per capita losses in the world.
Gambling companies have been emboldened by inaction, with TabCorp ramping up inducements
as they exploit the regulatory vacuum.
Dr McMullen said Peta Murphy’s report had exposed how these companies
use this lack of oversight to systematically target vulnerable audiences, particularly children, through sports advertising.
"The inquiry was unambiguous — online gambling companies deliberately exploit Australia’s love of sport
to normalise gambling as harmless fun," she said.
"Australia's sporting codes and broadcasters have been in lockstep with gambling industry
with its partners to oppose restrictions."
The AMA has championed reform since 2013, calling for an independent regulator and comprehensive advertising bans.
Gambling harm causes severe mental health disorders,
substance abuse, family breakdown and financial devastation.
The AMA demands an immediate response to all 31 recommendations, including total advertising bans,
an independent regulator, and child protection.
"Every day of delay means more Australians fall victim to an industry that profits from harm and despair."
The rules that protect you are just not working.
All telemarketers and research callers have to follow additional rules, even where they are allowed to call numbers on a
Do Not call register.
Even if the company or person is exempt, they must
Only call you certain times of the day.
Say their name, the name of their employer and (if the are calling of behalf of someone else), their name as well.
Tell you why they are calling.
End the call if you ask them to or indicate you do not want to continue.
Have a caller ID displaying a return number for you to use to get more information.
What Our Australia is calling for is a complete ban on cold calling.
We have a right to our own privacy lets enact it.
99% of all spam emails originate from overseas hitting Australians via our servers / data centres.
This is where the filters / blocking should be not on our phones or computers.
we shouldnt have to be subjected to continous scam emails that target vulnerable Australians or any Australian that are unaware of its deceptive nature.
AI
● Creating and spreading disinformation
● Compromising cybersecurity
● Creating pornographic deep fakes of real people’s photos including of children (school
aged children in Australia using AI-generated deep fake pornography to bully peers.
There is mass misuse of women’s online photos to sell porn subscriptions, a Tasmanian was
jailed for two years for uploading and downloading AI-generated child abuse material
.
● Threatening livelihoods (AI is built on vast amounts of copyright information which threaten
writers, artists and the creative industries’ livelihoods.
The Australian Government is well aware of the current harms to Australians.
A Roy Morgan
survey shows a sizeable majority of 57% of Australians believe AI creates more
problems than it solves.
The Government's response falls short of Australians’ expectations to regulate AI
There is a strong expectation from the Australian public for the Government to regulate AI. The
broad consensus in the submissions to the Government’s is that
voluntary guardrails are insufficient.
In a Choice survey of 1000 respondents, four in five
Australians believe that businesses must ensure their AI systems are fair and safe pre-deployment
and 77% agree the government should make this a requirement.
The Government has so far committed to a minimal number of measures, such as:
● Exploring voluntary measures such as watermarking and an industry safety standard,
● Setting up a temporary expert advisory body,
● A ban on deepfake pornography,
● A Copyright and Artificial Intelligence reference group (AG).
This is very concerning because these actions will not address the harms facing Australians
from misuse of AI technology.
In the last ten years, the lack of regulation on social media platforms and digital services in has led
to the global entrenchment of a handful of businesses that have been found to cause serious
privacy and safety harms to Australians.
The advancement of AI technology is dominated by the
same businesses and while they may choose to behave differently for this technology, it is more
likely they will continue bad behaviour until they face consequences.
The Australian Government must not delay action.




