
Highly accessible AI tools can now generate sexually explicit content without a person’s knowledge or consent – a growing concern in Queensland schools – with harmful content being generated to cyber-bully.
To ensure Queensland laws keep pace with technology, the Government will criminalise the creation of intimate images of a person through digital technology without their consent, closing the loophole that has allowed perpetrators to evade accountability.
The proposed new offence will:
Attorney-General, Minister for Justice and Minister for Integrity Deb Frecklington said the reforms demonstrate the Government’s commitment to prioritising victims’ rights.
“This is for the women who have had their images weaponised against them, the teachers who have been the subject of heinous cyber-bullying, and for every victim who was told the law couldn’t help - because now we are changing that,” the Attorney-General said.
“For too long, offenders have been able to exploit a loophole in the law to create harmful and exploitative content without facing the full consequences. We are closing that loophole.
The Queensland Government will undertake targeted consultation with stakeholders across the education, legal, sexual violence and online safety sectors as part of developing the legislation.