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Government

Qld government announces new digital project governance bodies Child protection advocates call for faster action on digital duty of care laws Cyber resilience a key plank of new Nakamal Agreement between Vanuatu and Australia ACMA targets SMS scams, emergency services, and telco protections in 2026–27 compliance agenda Exclusive: Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party quietly deletes Labor hacking claims Privacy Commissioner rules Medmate and Monash IVF breached privacy law through tracking pixels Australia’s Department of Parliamentary Services has only “partly effective” cyber security stature, audit finds Australian government, Microsoft sign agreement strengthening cyber security Tony Burke announces ‘new program of work’ under Horizon 2 of the Australian Cyber Security Strategy AFCA to become Australia’s central scams complaints body under new prevention framework Pentagon’s new Department of Defense Cyber Defense Command could be a good model for Australia Be counted: Australia’s next census faces cyber security shortcomings Aussie government proposes automatic reimbursement for scam losses below $3,000 Op-Ed: Australia’s cyber law is stuck in the past – the Slay Review is our chance to fix it ACCC welcomes another year of funding for the National Anti-Scam Centre Budget 2026: Expectations around AI, SMB resilience, and national defence Australia strengthens cyber defence in multinational operation New Zealand announces new sanctions against Russian cyber actors, online support platforms Australian government establishes new Cyber Incident Review Board US Department of War launches cyber-focused apprenticeship program Australian government stands up new ‘tripartite forum’ to tackle AI challenges in the workforce Australian Army research paper advocates for Australian national cyber reserve force, volunteer cyber organisations ADF strengthens skills as Cyber Command marks 2 years of operation Op-Ed: Australia inspired the EU’s online age restrictions, now it’s time for us to learn from them Latitude Financial faces $3.96m fine over spam law breaches Kid stuff: Roblox to introduce safety improvements following Aus government warnings Report: Aussie youth increasingly turning to AI for mental health advice First draft of Children’s Online Privacy Code made public Kids’ stuff: OAIC releases exposure draft of Children’s Online Privacy Code Aussie telco consumer code to be replaced in favour of ‘stronger protections’ Government proposes 5 changes to SOCI Act in overhaul of ministerial directions powers Cyber, defence cooperation key plank of new EU–Australia partnership Q&A: ‘Just be mindful that people are interested in you,’ says Sarah Sloan Trump releases US National Cyber Strategy CISO for Department of Health and Aged Care retires FIIG Fined: Federal Court orders $2.5M penalty for cyber security failures US CISA in a bad way as a new acting head is appointed Who is on the frontline when it comes to AI policymaking in Australia? Australian government unveils 5-year deal with Microsoft to lock in pricing and support AI adoption Australia, Samoa sign memorandum of understanding on cyber cooperation
Op-Ed: Australia’s next budget must treat cyber resilience as essential infrastructure
Samir Sherif, global field CISO, and Nicola Gerber, vice preside · 2026-05-06 · via Government

Cyber resilience is no longer optional – it’s a must-have item that the federal budget and the Albanese government must account for.

Australia is approaching a defining budget moment.

The federal government is rightly investing in AI, digital service delivery, and modern public infrastructure.

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But there is a hard truth policymakers should confront: none of those investments will deliver their promise if they are not resilient by design.

In today’s environment, cyber resilience is not a technical nice-to-have or a compliance line item. It is the operating condition that determines whether digital government works, whether essential services stay available, and whether AI adoption strengthens the economy or widens its exposure to disruption.

The latest market evidence is unambiguous.

The Team8 2025 CISO Village Survey found that one in four CISOs experienced an AI-generated attack in the past 12 months. At the same time, 67 per cent of enterprises are deploying AI agents in 2025, while 37 per cent say more than 40 per cent of critical vulnerabilities remain unpatched beyond SLA.

Add to that the finding that 68 per cent of breaches are still caused by human actions, and the message is clear: the attack surface is expanding faster than most organisations can govern it. AI is accelerating automation for defenders, yes, but it is also accelerating automation for attackers across impersonation, bots, credential abuse, and application-layer attacks.

That matters enormously for Australia’s public sector and for the broader economy. The government has already committed $225.2 million over four years for the APS AI Plan, including $166.4 million to expand GovAI and pilot a secure AI assistant, plus $29.8 million for the AI Safety Institute. It has also articulated expectations for data centres and AI infrastructure developers around national interest, data sovereignty, cyber security, clean energy, workforce capability, and research access.

These are sensible moves. But if the coming federal budget stops at enablement without materially strengthening resilience, Australia risks building a faster, smarter, and more connected digital estate that is also more fragile.

The scale of digitisation already underway should remove any doubt about the stakes.

The Major Digital Projects Report 2026 shows $1.3 billion across 14 active projects in the government sector, $2.2 billion across 16 projects in healthcare and aged care, and $1.8 billion across 12 projects focused on the safety of Australians.

These programs are modernising legacy systems, improving identity protection, reducing fraud, and expanding digital access to essential services. That is precisely why the budget must elevate cyber resilience now. The more Australia relies on APIs, cloud platforms, real-time data, and automated workflows, the more damaging application abuse, bot attacks, DDoS events, and service degradation become.

Resilience has to sit alongside innovation from the beginning, not get bolted on after the next incident.

From Fastly’s perspective, this is not an abstract policy debate. It is what modern defenders are dealing with every day. Security teams are being asked to protect sprawling estates of applications, APIs, and microservices while keeping digital experiences fast, safe, and engaging. Traditional perimeter thinking is no longer enough. Security has to operate where the modern internet operates: at the edge, in real time, close to the user, and before malicious traffic reaches the origin infrastructure.

That is why Fastly’s point of view is simple: resilience today depends on securing the application layer with the same seriousness governments once reserved for networks and endpoints.

This is also why the budget conversation should move beyond generic digital transformation and focus on resilient digital transformation. The Tech Council of Australia’s 2026 survey found that 49 per cent of leaders want tech adoption or investment incentives, and 90 per cent believe Australia is not doing enough on productivity.

Industry is not asking Canberra to spend blindly. It is asking the government to invest where technology produces durable economic value. That means funding and procurement settings that reward secure-by-design architectures, strong API visibility, bot and DDoS protections, modern application security, and deployment models that reduce recovery times when incidents occur. It also means recognising that resilience extends beyond departments to suppliers, SMEs, and the broader ecosystem that public services depend on.

The call to action for the next federal budget is straightforward.

Australia should make cyber resilience a core investment priority across AI deployment, digital government, critical service delivery, and public procurement. Specifically, the budget should expand support for modern app and API protection, strengthen cyber uplift for essential digital services and supply chains, embed resilience requirements into funded transformation programs, and back practical measures that reduce attacker advantage at scale.

If Canberra wants a technology agenda that lifts productivity, protects trust, and keeps services running under pressure, resilience cannot be an afterthought. It must be the architecture. That is the opportunity in this budget: not simply to build more digital capability, but to build a digital Australia that can withstand what is coming next.

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