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eSafety report finds Big Tech not adequately protecting young men from sextortion Most Australians don’t want AI data centres in their neighbourhood, survey finds AI could disrupt the economy, regardless of whether it booms or crashes Senate demands OAIC hand over details of AMEX investigation Sydney booking agent responds to AI artist claims: ‘... will never book people who use AI to generate music’ Aussie creatives pen open letter calling on government to protect artists’ rights from AI companies Australia doubles social media ban fines as eSafety gets greater powers AFP to tackle serious online harms and cyber crime at Five Eyes Law Enforcement Group meeting ‘Moderation cannot be an afterthought’: What to know before you post an AI-generated Albo meme Report: Most Australians have ‘fractured awareness’ of digital privacy FOI docs reveal information commissioner’s concerns over Age Assurance Technology Trial Social media giants face eSafety investigation over age ban compliance issues Porn shop: Aussies turn to potentially risky VPNs following introduction of age verification requirements NZ firms say staff AI misuse is a key cyber risk Kinetic IT appoints new CEO to drive national growth UK MPs reject Australia-style social media ban The industry speaks: International Women’s Day 2026 Plugged in, turned on, and exposed: How sex tech is becoming the latest cyber security frontline Cyber preparedness critical as brokers face rising attack risk AI growth drives Woolworths to have separate executives for InfoSec, physical security Unpacking the challenges for women in the cyber security sector Anthropic's latest products cause stock market slump as traditional SaaS offerings questioned TikTok faces potential EU fine over platform’s addictive properties Aussie activists call on app stores to remove Grok chatbot over nudify feature
AISA warns Australia’s cyber workforce shortage demands urgent diversity push
David Hollingworth · 2026-05-27 · via Culture

Australia’s peak cyber security body has warned the nation faces a deepening cyber capability crisis unless governments and industry take urgent action to broaden participation in the sector.

AISA warns Australia’s cyber workforce shortage demands urgent diversity push

The Australian Information Security Association (AISA) has called for a national effort to diversify Australia’s cyber security workforce, warning that escalating threats and skills shortages are exposing a growing capability gap across government and industry alike.

The body said Australia could not afford to leave major talent pools untapped as demand for cyber professionals continues to outpace workforce growth.

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According to Jobs and Skills Australia data cited by AISA, around 70,900 Australians were employed as database and systems administrators and ICT security specialists as of August 2025, with employment in the sector projected to grow by 14.2 per cent by 2029 – more than double the national average.

At the same time, AISA said more than half of Australian government agencies are already experiencing critical cyber security skills shortages, according to the State of the Service Report.

Scarlett McDermott, AISA board member and cyber security expert, said Australia would struggle to meet future capability requirements unless governments and industry significantly expanded efforts to attract women, First Nations Australians, career changers, regional workers, and people from disadvantaged backgrounds into the sector.

“Cyber security is now fundamental to Australia’s national resilience, economic stability and public safety, but we are still drawing from a workforce pool that is far too narrow,” McDermott said in a 27 May statement.

“We cannot continue talking about cyber shortages while overlooking enormous talent pools across the Australian community.”

McDermott said women currently represent just 17 per cent of Australia’s cyber security workforce, highlighting what she described as a major structural workforce issue.

AISA argued the issue extends beyond diversity targets and represents a broader national security and economic resilience challenge.

The organisation pointed to industry research showing that less-diverse industries tend to experience deeper and more persistent workforce shortages, while broader participation improves innovation, resilience, and productivity.

Speaking at CyberConnect Canberra 2026, McDermott said cyber security teams benefit from broader lived experience and varied problem-solving approaches, particularly as cyber threats increasingly target vulnerable communities, essential services, and critical infrastructure.

“Cyber attackers do not all think the same way, and our defenders cannot all come from the same backgrounds either,” McDermott said.

“We need stronger pathways for women and people who identify as women, First Nations Australians, regional Australians, career changers and people from disadvantaged communities.”

AISA is calling for expanded government incentives and workforce initiatives aimed at underrepresented groups, including scholarships, mentoring programs, cadetships, flexible work arrangements, and increased investment in cyber education and training across schools, vocational education, universities, and mid-career transition programs.

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David Hollingworth

David Hollingworth has been writing about technology for over 20 years, and has worked for a range of print and online titles in his career. He is enjoying getting to grips with cyber security, especially when it lets him talk about Lego.