Australia and the United Kingdom have today co-signed an historic Online Safety and Security Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), ushering in a new era of bilateral cooperation between the two countries to support safer and more positive experience online.
The first arrangement of its kind, the MoU has a broad focus and encompasses a wide range of digital online safety and security issues, including illegal content, child safety, age assurance, technology facilitated gender-based violence, and addressing harms caused by rapidly changing technology, like generative artificial intelligence.
The MoU will help amplify the world-class regulatory regimes in both countries, including the UK’s Online Safety Act 2023, and Australia’s Online Safety Act 2021, which seek to make the two countries the safest places in the world to be online.
The UK and Australia have a shared commitment to upholding and promoting human rights, fundamental freedoms, democracy, and the rule of law, both online and offline, and the MoU enshrines that commitment.
The MoU pledges to deepen and intensify cooperation across several key pillars, including deeper cooperation on online safety and security.
Both governments have committed to closer cooperation in the form of in-person dialogues, coordinated bilateral and multilateral engagement, regulatory engagement, shared research projects, and working with industry to address safety challenges posed by design choices.
The partnership will allow both countries to lead the international agenda and shape a global consensus on tackling online harms.
The MoU will be taken forward by the UK Department for Science, Innovation, and Technology (DSIT) and the Australian Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications, and the Arts (DITRDCA), in collaboration with other relevant departments and agencies on both sides.