ECAJ submission to Online Safety Act review 2024

ECAJ submission to Online Safety Act review 2024

The ECAJ says the Online Safety Act doesn’t do enough to protect vul­ner­able groups and needs to be strengthened urgently, in its sub­mis­sion to a review of the Act.


The volume of antisemitic content online and antisemitic incidents and discourse offline is increas­ing. Gaps in the Online Safety Act allow antisemitism to flourish online, and allowing it to flourish online con­trib­utes to it flour­ish­ing offline.

The ECAJ’s sub­mis­sion to a review of the Act made 16 recom­mend­a­tions, including:

  • The Act needs to be widened to protect vul­ner­able groups, not just indi­vidu­als.
  • The Act needs to be widened to respond to online harms not expli­citly captured by existing regimes: online hate, pile-on attacks, tech­no­logy-facil­it­ated abuse, abuse of public figures.
  • The Act needs stronger reporting require­ments and penalties.
  • Services with higher risk and reach should have higher reg­u­lat­ory require­ments.
  • There should be a sliding scale of penalties, with greater penalties for more serious and systemic offending.
  • Penalties need to be a mean­ing­ful deterrent and should take into account services’ global turnover.
    Services should have an annual inde­pend­ent eSafety audit.

Download full submission

Commentary by co-CEO Peter Wertheim, originally published in the Australian Financial Review on 7 April 2026.

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