Home Resources OAIC Privacy Survey 2023 Compliance OAIC Privacy Survey 2023 There has been a sharp increase in the number of Australians who feel data breaches are the biggest privacy risk they face today, according to a major survey released today by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC). The Australian Community Attitudes to Privacy Survey (ACAPS) 2023 provides a comprehensive view of Australians’ privacy attitudes and experiences and how recent events have impacted them. The survey tested attitudes on topics such as data practices, privacy legislation, data breaches, biometrics, artificial intelligence and children’s privacy. Key findings: Three-quarters of Australians feel data breaches are one of the biggest privacy risks they face today. This has increased 13 percentage points since 2020. Seventy per cent of Australians place a high level of importance on their privacy when choosing a product or service. After quality and price, data privacy is the third most important factor when choosing a product or service. Australians trust health service providers the most and social media companies the least when it comes to the protection and use of their personal information. Only 42% of Australians feel most organisations they deal with are transparent about the way they use their personal information, and three in five don’t understand what organisations do with the information they collect. Over half of Australians consider having to share some personal information if they want to use a service fair enough. However, they generally only consider it fair and reasonable to provide their name (81%) and email address (77%) to organisations and, to a lesser extent, their phone number (68%), date of birth (62%) and physical address (61%). Protecting their child’s personal information is a major concern for 79% of parents. However, only half feel they are in control of their child’s data privacy. Eighty-five per cent of parents believe children must be empowered to use the internet and online services, but their data privacy must be protected. Takeaways for Organisations: Go back to basics: Don’t collect personal information you don’t need. Securely store personal information. Delete or deidentify personal information when it is no longer needed. Help individuals protect their privacy and make informed choices, for example, through privacy education and being clear and transparent about how you use their information. Ask yourself whether the community would consider your practices to be fair and reasonable. If you experience a data breach, quickly take steps to prevent customers suffering harm, report the breach and notify individuals if it is likely to result in serious harm, and consider making improvements to your privacy practices. Make good privacy practices part of your point of difference. 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Filter Resources Filter Courses Capability Capability Campaign Integration Compliance Customer Experience Marketing Technology Insights Learnings Brand Development Content Format Content Format Information sheet Member-only Press-release Article Blog Case Study Data Event Infographic Media Coverage Research Tool-kit Video Webinar Whitepaper Topics Topics CMO Crib Sheet CMO Spotlight Global Forum Global Forum 2023 Privacy series Resource Compliance Resources CEO Blog Compliance Regulatory Content Copywriting Creative Data Data-driven Marketing Digital Campaigns Leadership Social Media Thought Leadership 08th Aug 2017 3 mins Government increases penalties for failure to comply with Privacy Act and Spam Act As of 1 July 2017, penalty units under Commonwealth law increased from $180 per unit to $210 per unit. This effectively means that fines have increased for failure to comply with the Privacy Act, Spam Act, the Do Not Call Register Act and the Australian Consumer Law. Article 08th May 2017 5 mins New Standards for telemarketers and researchers The newly remade 2017 ACMA Telemarketing and Research Standard has recently come into effect. The Standard outlines the minimum contact they can expect from telemarketing and research organisations and reduce compliance and administrative costs to the industry. Article 15th Feb 2017 4 mins Privacy, metadata and the new landscape In January, ADMA made a submission in response to the Attorney-General Department’s Privacy Act Review Discussion Paper. Article 17th Jan 2017 7 mins How to: Ensure your unsubscribe facility works To ensure that consumers are protected by, and marketers comply with the Spam Act 2003, every commercial electronic message sent in Australia must contain an unsubscribe facility. Article 04th Oct 2016 10 mins The Privacy Act - Spam Read an overview of the Spam Act and learn about types of consent, identity and unsubscribe facilities. 06th Sep 2016 Collecting Data: Email marketing and consent Matterkind CEO Clay Gill says marketers must quickly get to grips with a post-cookie world – and what looming regulation means for consent management. Load More
08th Aug 2017 3 mins Government increases penalties for failure to comply with Privacy Act and Spam Act As of 1 July 2017, penalty units under Commonwealth law increased from $180 per unit to $210 per unit. This effectively means that fines have increased for failure to comply with the Privacy Act, Spam Act, the Do Not Call Register Act and the Australian Consumer Law.
Article 08th May 2017 5 mins New Standards for telemarketers and researchers The newly remade 2017 ACMA Telemarketing and Research Standard has recently come into effect. The Standard outlines the minimum contact they can expect from telemarketing and research organisations and reduce compliance and administrative costs to the industry.
Article 15th Feb 2017 4 mins Privacy, metadata and the new landscape In January, ADMA made a submission in response to the Attorney-General Department’s Privacy Act Review Discussion Paper.
Article 17th Jan 2017 7 mins How to: Ensure your unsubscribe facility works To ensure that consumers are protected by, and marketers comply with the Spam Act 2003, every commercial electronic message sent in Australia must contain an unsubscribe facility.
Article 04th Oct 2016 10 mins The Privacy Act - Spam Read an overview of the Spam Act and learn about types of consent, identity and unsubscribe facilities.
06th Sep 2016 Collecting Data: Email marketing and consent Matterkind CEO Clay Gill says marketers must quickly get to grips with a post-cookie world – and what looming regulation means for consent management.