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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 Op-Ed: Australia’s next budget must treat cyber resilience as essential infrastructure 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 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
First draft of Children’s Online Privacy Code made public
bethany.alvaro@momentummedia.com.au (Bethany Alvaro) · 2026-03-31 · via Government

The first draft of the Children’s Online Privacy Code has been published, marking a significant step forward in prioritising child safety in the digital landscape.

The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) has released the exposure, public draft of the Children’s Online Privacy Code, which puts the responsibility on online services (apps, games, and websites, for instance) rather than barring children from digital spaces.

The code is set up under a primary framework of keeping the best interests of children at the forefront of digital environments, which privacy commissioner Carly Kind said is the key responsibility of digital platforms.

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“Children play, learn, socialise and connect with family and culture online – it’s important that children can participate without fear or exploitation,” Kind said.

“The code will give confidence to parents that the apps, games and websites their children use are taking steps to protect children’s privacy.”

Outlining a range of provisions, the code primarily targets online services to have clearer and more accessible ways of communicating what personal information is being stored and used for those under 18.

Key rules and regulations the code seeks to enact include providing young people with the ability to request the deletion of their information and old accounts, involving parents and guardians in the process of providing data consent, stronger restrictions on targeted marketing, and enforcement of accessible language use in terms and conditions/permission documents.

“It raises the standard for privacy protections in Australia and puts the onus on online services to do better when handling children’s personal information online,” Kind said.

Importantly, compared to the under-16s social media ban, the Children’s Online Privacy Code applies to all people under the age of 18 in any digital space or online service, not just social media apps like Instagram or TikTok.

The draft code has been largely welcomed by child advocacy bodies, as for many years they have been urging the government to take formal action against online services that directly target children’s data.

Estimates suggest that by the time a child turns 13, approximately 72 million pieces of their online data have been collected.

“By requiring platforms to prioritise the wellbeing of children over data-driven profits, we are finally seeing the systemic accountability that parents and educators have been demanding,” said Sarah Davies, CEO of the Alannah & Madeline Foundation.

“We welcome this code and call for clear penalties for non-compliance. We are eager to ensure that the regulator is fully resourced and has support to bring these protections to life.

“It’s no small task to change the way the tech industry handles children’s data, but with the rise of generative AI and other digital technologies, we cannot afford not to do it.”

As concerns about the use of children’s data for marketing, AI, and commodification grow, the drafted code is open to public feedback from parents and young people, as well as industry and academic organisations.

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