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House of RepresentativesMonday 29 June 2026

QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE

Ms WELLS (Lilley—Minister for Sport and Minister for Communications) (14:45): Thank you very much to the member for Curtin for her question and for continuing to work with me and like-minded parliamentary colleagues on such an important space. I truly believe we are at the coalface of one of the most compelling policy questions of our time, and this is what that looks like—thoughtful questions, thoughtful answers.

The digital duty of care is meant to do two things. One is to make big tech prevent harm to their users and to prevent psychosocial harm to their users. I believe that defining it as psychosocial harm captures what you're talking about by way of emerging harms as we get more research that comes into the field.

The second element of the digital duty of care is safety by design. That is switching the onus from them being able to, at the moment, do basically whatever they like in an unregulated space, the harm occurring and then avenues to people who have been harmed through things like e-safety to big tech needing to do safety by design. I'll call out here something that Wayne Holdsworth said in our meeting and then the press conference with the Prime Minister earlier today about the social media laws, which are the first tranche ahead of what's coming with digital duty of care.

He said that, when seatbelts became mandatory—it's something I say all the time—people did not immediately comply with them. It took a while for that cultural change to seep through to now, where you're at a point where, if you don't have your seatbelt on in the car, your kid will tell you: 'The cops are going to stop you. You haven't got your seatbelt on.' Those seatbelts, when they first came into place in Australia, weren't retractable.

They were a much earlier form of the kind of seatbelts that we see now. In fact, now we have different car manufacturing companies compete to be the safest car on the roads—Volvo's five-point safety harness for your children. I truly believe that what we're doing here is moving from that early, non-retractable seatbelt model to a point where online tech competes to be the safest company in the space.

That means we have to hold them to account. That means we have to continue to work together in a bipartisan measure. In short, I think we do address that, but I look forward to continuing to work with you on digital duty of care in the second half of this year.

SourceHouse of Representatives, Monday 29 June 2026 — official recordTA-260629-house-2aa448864ab1:s230