Australia’s privacy payouts escalate (but will they pass the pub test?)
Much depends on the level of compensation in a class action and representative action cases against Meta, Optus and Qantas. By Graham Greenleaf, Honorary Professor,
Macquarie University Law School.
Something which “passes the pub test” is “something the ordinary patron in an Australian pub would understand and accept to be fair, were it to come up in conversation.”(1) The test has been compared to reasonable person standards in law.(2)
For decades, enforcement of Australia’s privacy laws has been criticised widely, including by other government authorities.(3) It had manifestly failed to pass the pub test: principles falling far short of those in Europe; pathetic penalties; and timorous Privacy Commissioners failing to use even the limited powers that they have. The result is that Australians have no confidence that they would ever receive fair compensation for the massive data breaches that occur every week.
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