Department of Justice Tasmania
New interim compliance guidance
The new interim guidance resource is designed to support organisations to enact the Child and Youth Safe Standards and Universal Principle for Aboriginal Cultural Safety.
New resources webpage
Our new webpage lists all available resources about the Framework, including links to downloadable posters, information sheets and translated resources.
Reportable Conduct Scheme Forums
Don't forget to register for an upcoming, sector-specific online forum to learn more about the Reportable Conduct Scheme, listed at the bottom of our forum webpage
Questions?
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with any questions you have about the Framework.
MY PICTURES MATTER
Could your childhood photos help save a child from harm?
Monash University and the Australian Federal Police are inviting people to join their machine learning project to help fight child exploitation, by contributing photographs of themselves as children (aged 0-17) through AiLECS My Pictures Matter campaign. www.mypicturesmatter.org
These ethically-sourced pictures of children in everyday contexts will be used to train artificial intelligence (AI) models to recognise the presence of children in ‘safe’ situations, to help identify ‘unsafe’ situations and potentially flag child exploitation material.
To develop these AI models intended to combat child exploitation, researchers are aiming for at least 100,000 childhood photos to form the database.
But they do not want to source from stock photos or random images pulled from the internet, because the children in those pictures have not consented for their photographs to be used for research. Informed consent is an important part of building technologies that are ethically accountable and transparent.
To participate or find out more information about the project, visit https://mypicturesmatter.org/