Does Privacy Act 1988 — Automated Decision-Making Reforms require Risk Assessment?
Australia • enacted
Yes — 1 provision
Requirements at a glance
This regulation imposes 3 specific requirements for Risk Assessment across 1 provision:
- PIA as reasonable step — OAIC treats PIAs as a "reasonable step" under APP 1 for high-risk AI deployments; absence is evidence of non-compliance for high-risk processing
- Third-party accountability — Remain responsible under APP 11 for personal data shared with external AI platforms; due diligence on vendors is part of APP 1 compliance
- Children's Online Privacy Code — PIAs required for child-facing AI services once the Code is registered (by 10 December 2026); this is Code-based, not a standalone Privacy Act obligation
Privacy Impact Assessments for AI #
No general statutory PIA mandate for AI exists in the Privacy Act 1988. The POLA Act 2024 did not enact a universal PIA requirement effective 2026-12-10. PIAs are however a "reasonable step" expected under APP 1 for high-risk processing (including AI, profiling, large-scale analytics) per OAIC guidance — failure to conduct a PIA for high-risk AI will be treated as evidence of non-compliance with APP 1. Specific instruments (e.g. the Children's Online Privacy Code, government data-sharing frameworks) do mandate PIAs in defined contexts.
Requirements
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| PIA as reasonable step | OAIC treats PIAs as a "reasonable step" under APP 1 for high-risk AI deployments; absence is evidence of non-compliance for high-risk processing |
| Third-party accountability | Remain responsible under APP 11 for personal data shared with external AI platforms; due diligence on vendors is part of APP 1 compliance |
| Children's Online Privacy Code | PIAs required for child-facing AI services once the Code is registered (by 10 December 2026); this is Code-based, not a standalone Privacy Act obligation |
Penalties
| Violation | Fine |
|---|---|
| APP 1 non-compliance | Civil penalties per Privacy Act enforcement provisions; OAIC has signalled enforcement focus on high-risk AI |