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Government flags major fines for companies failing to protect Australians from scams

By IANS | Updated: September 13, 2024 20:10 IST

Canberra, Sep 13 The Australian government has announced plans to issue fines worth millions of dollars to companies ...

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Canberra, Sep 13 The Australian government has announced plans to issue fines worth millions of dollars to companies that fail to protect customers from scams.

Stephen Jones, the assistant treasurer, on Friday released details of the government's proposed new laws that would force banks, telecommunications companies and technology giants to do more to protect customers under mandatory sector-specific codes.

The codes will create new obligations for designated sectors to combat scammers and protect Australians.

Companies in those sectors that fail to meet their obligations will face fines worth up to 50 million Australian dollars (33.6 million U.S. dollars), Xinhua news agency reported.

Under the laws, the government will initially designate banks, telecommunication service providers and a range of digital platform services related to social media, paid search engine advertising and direct messaging services as the affected sectors.

"We want to ensure that the best protections anywhere in the world are available to people here in Australia," Jones said in a statement.

"Australians are losing too much money to scams and while we've bucked the international trend where scams are doubling every year, losses are still far too much."

Scam victims will be entitled to seek compensation from a bank, digital platform or telecommunications company by taking their case to the Australian Financial Complaints Authority.

Banks will also be required to report a scam to authorities as soon as they learn of it and attempt to stop payments from going through.

A report published by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission in April revealed that Australians reported losing 2.74 billion Australian dollars (1.84 billion dollars) to scams in 2023.

--IANS

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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