Australia news live: First Nations groups plan national rallies in response to Camp Sovereignty attack | Australia news

First Nations call for national day of action in response to anti-immigration rallies

In Sydney, the Blak Caucus, working with Gadigal people and other Sovereign owners of the region, will hold a major rally on 13 September with the slogans:

Sovereignty Never Ceded, Racism and Fascism Not Welcomed, No to Nazis, No to White Supremacy, Stand With Camp Sovereignty, Corroboree Not Colony

It is part of a national day of action being led by First Nations groups across Australia in response to the attack on Camp Sovereignty and the March for Australia demonstrations.

Aunty Rhonda Dixon Grovenor, a Gadigal elder, urged supporters to attend:

We were shocked to … hear about the violence put on our people at Camp Sovereignty on Wurundjeri country in Melbourne.

This brought back memories of how our camps of our people were attacked back during the invasion that took our lands, or how the police attack out people, like in 1972 when they tried to tear down the Tent Embassy. We must take a stand to say: no more.

All people who are true and strong and love everything that is beautiful about these lands, you are welcome here.

Aunty Rhonda Dixon Grovenor, left, in Sydney in 2020. Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP
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Josh Taylor

Josh Taylor

Meta questioned definition of ‘celeb-bait’ in scams court case but used the term this week

Meta argued in the federal court it did not understand the Australian consumer watchdog using the term “celeb-bait” to describe alleged scam ads on its platforms, however the Facebook and Instagram parent company used the term in press material this week.

The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) is suing Meta over the scam ads featuring deepfakes of public figures such as the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, with the 2022 case yet to go to a hearing.

A judgment in the federal court on Friday revealed Meta had sought to strike out the ACCC’s further amended statement of claim in part because “Meta contended… that they do not understand the term celeb-bait” in the context of the company being expected to take reasonable steps to prevent such ads ending up on its platform.

The court ruled against Meta. Justice Wendy Abraham said she did not consider “that there is any lack of understanding” by Meta “as to what is meant by clickbait advertisements”.

Their attributes are identified in the pleadings… There is an artificiality to this complaint.

Meta’s global head of counter-fraud and security policy, Nathaniel Gleicher, who is US-based, used the term in a press release to reporters this week, in explaining the action the company was taking on scams:

In Australia, between April and May 2024, 102 reports were provided by the Australian Financial Crimes Exchange Intel Loop, enabling Meta to remove over 9,000 spam pages and over 8,000 AI-generated celeb bait scams across Facebook and Instagram.

Meta said in a briefing that users were encountering scam ads 60% less often on its services than a year ago. In July 2024, the number of scam ads reported globally was at 4.5 per million total ad views, compared to 1.8 scam ad reports per million views as of July this year.

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