Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Fraud Management & Cybercrime
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Governance & Risk Management
Also: Australia’s AI Policy Backtrack, Legal Protections for White Hat Hackers
In this week’s panel, four ISMG editors explored Australia’s shift in artificial intelligence regulatory policy, a resurgence of white hat hackers in the news and the Telegram-based darknet market of Russian fraudsters who are selling identities of former U.S. immigrants for $1,000 a person.
See Also: Agentic AI and the Future of Automated Threats
The panelists – Anna Delaney, director, productions; Tony Morbin, executive news editor, EU; Rashmi Ramesh, senior associate editor; and Suparna Goswami, executive editor – discussed:
- How Australia softened its AI governance approach, shifting from a tough, enforceable regulatory framework to a voluntary, principles-based model that critics say prioritizes innovation over accountability and enforcement;
- The renewed global focus on white hat hackers, and how outdated cybercrime laws are criminalizing ethical security research and why governments are now under pressure to create legal protections that encourage responsible vulnerability disclosure – without enabling abuse;
- The emergence of a highly organized underground market trading in abandoned identities of former U.S. immigrants, exposing a systemic blind spot where inactive Social Security numbers and credit histories are being exploited for large-scale financial fraud.
The ISMG Editors’ Panel runs weekly. Don’t miss our previous installments, including the Nov. 28 edition on India’s data protection rules and the Dec. 5 edition on the rapid evolution of ransomware.

