Ms WELLS (Lilley—Minister for Sport and Minister for Communications) (14:25): One of the reasons the Albanese government is committed to implementing a digital duty of care, which we intend to do through the parliament this year, is to address online harms that are affecting Australians. That includes preventing nudify apps and deepfakes generated by AI and also hate online. We just closed the consultation process for that at the end of last year. We are now working through the consultation responses. We intend to work collaboratively with our parliamentarians to try and get this through the parliament by the end of the year to ensure that the digital duty of care— The SPEAKER: The member for Warringah on a point of order. Ms Steggall: It's on relevance. I'm talking about political advertising. The SPEAKER: The minister was directly answering your question. I did hear her mention AI and deepfakes, which you were asking about. She was midsentence regarding that part of the answer. I can appreciate that maybe you want a certain answer, but I've got to make sure she's been directly relevant, and she is being, absolutely, directly relevant. Ms WELLS: The digital duty of care is designed to change the power balance so that the onus is on big tech to prevent harm from occurring to Australians through their own systems and policies before the harm occurs. Currently, it's like an ambulance at the bottom of the cliff. The harm occurs and then someone goes and reports something like misinformation in political advertising. A digital duty of care will put the onus on big tech to be responsible towards Australians from the get-go. (Time expired)