ACCC Highlights Need for Ongoing Monitoring of AI Developments
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) emphasizes the importance of monitoring AI technologies due to their rapid development and potential consumer and competition risks.
16.12.2025 | Australian competition authority
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has released an industry snapshot on artificial intelligence (AI), highlighting the rapid advancements in AI technologies and their implications for consumers and businesses in Australia.
ACCC Chair Gina Cass-Gottlieb noted that AI-enabled products and services are becoming increasingly significant, transforming how Australians work and interact with digital services. However, these developments also pose risks to consumer protection and competition.
The snapshot updates on trends in generative AI since the March 2025 Final Report of the Digital Platform Services Inquiry, advocating for a regulatory monitoring function for emerging digital technologies under the proposed digital competition regime.
Key findings include the growing interconnections between AI offerings and existing digital platform services, which may enhance user experience but also raise barriers to entry and limit consumer choice. The report also discusses the potential risks associated with agentic AI, including unintended collusion among AI agents.
Furthermore, the ACCC identified several consumer risks linked to the increasing use of AI services, such as data privacy concerns, the facilitation of false representations, and the rise of online scams. The report emphasizes the need for informed consumer consent regarding data usage for AI training.
In conclusion, the ACCC stresses the necessity for ongoing scrutiny of AI technologies by regulators and supports the Australian Government's commitment to implementing a new digital competition regime to address these challenges.
