NSW Addresses AI-Manipulated Real Estate Images with New Legislation
Information Age
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Details
- Date Published
- 2 July 2025
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 4 July 2025, 03:43 pm
Description
New laws for image doctoring and tenant data hoarding.
Summary
The NSW government has introduced new legislation requiring landlords and real estate agents to disclose the use of AI in altering property images, aiming to enhance transparency and protect renters from misleading advertisements. This is part of a broader effort to implement tenant-friendly privacy measures, potentially penalizing non-disclosure with substantial fines. The legislation underscores the importance of AI governance in real estate advertising, but it does not directly address existential AI risks. While it is a notable local governance development in Australia, the article mainly focuses on consumer protection and data privacy rather than catastrophic AI risks.
Body
NSW tackles AI real estate picsNew laws for image doctoring and tenant data hoarding.By Leonard Bernardone on Jul 03 2025 11:42 AMPrint articleAI can remove trees, add decks, and make the grass greener. Photo: AVCNSW landlords and agents will need to admit when they've used AI to deceptively edit real estate pictures under new laws introduced by the NSW government.TheResidential Tenancies (Protection of Personal Information) Amendment Bill 2025, announced Sunday, will tackle photoshopped and AI-doctored images by introducing mandatory disclosure requirements on misleading rental ads.Further to introducing a slew of tenant-friendly data privacy measures, the NSW governmentannouncedlandlords and agents will need to disclose when images have been altered to "conceal faults" and "mislead rental applicants".Should the legislation pass parliament, the penalties for non-disclosure will be $5,500 for individuals and $22,000 for businesses.While the bill doesn’t single out AI, the government cited an example of “artificially generated furniture” that showed a double bed in a room only large enough to fit a single, and further noted advertisers must disclose when “digitally modifying photos” to obscure property damage.On Monday, the Tenants’ Union of NSW welcomed the legislative changes.“Growth of AI or digital manipulation has raced ahead in advertising of rental homes,”wrotethe union.A before and after AI photo using Autoenhance.ai. Photo: Autoenhance.ai“[These changes] will provide better protections for renters personal information and help prevent renters applying for homes being misled when AI-generated photos are used in the advertisement.”The new fisheye lensRenters have long lamented the use of photo editing and fisheye lenses to brush up unattractive property listings and make rooms seem larger, but the advent of AI has introduced dedicated real estate tools which canfurnish bare apartments, scrub unwanted details and shift the perspective of an image in seconds.It may not look like much before AI.... Photo: 4editor.comBut AI shows the room's potential. Photo: 4.editor.comOn the curtly named subreddit “r/shitrentals”, Australian tenantsreportedan NSW property listing with what appeared to be an AI-edited sheen over mouldy ceilings.Another Queenslandlistingappeared to reimagine a dimly lit kitchen using an image generator, while photos for a rental inVictoriahad clear signs of warping and were seemingly styled with cartoonish, AI-generated furniture.An NSW Fair Trading spokesperson toldInformation Agethe agencyhad received reports of images being “digitally altered” to obscure property damage, while Victorian Socialists’ former Senate candidate Jordan van den Lamb said he’d seen “countless rooms” enlarged to appear bigger than they are, or edited with AI to "smooth" surfaces that are either “patchy, mouldy, or riddled with holes and cracks.”“There are no longer any notable, individual examples [to cite] because the use of this technology, as well as Photoshop, is so prevalent,” said van den Lamb, also known as housing influencerPurplepingers.Van den Lamb added the newly proposed laws were not sufficient.“These laws are effectively a concession where the NSW Labor government says ‘oh, I guess misleading advertising is fine as long as you admit you're doing it’,” he said.“Laws that prohibit misleading and deceptive conduct already exist federally – they should perhaps consider enforcing them.”Privacy principles applied to landlordsThe new legislation will also apply the Privacy Act's Australian Privacy Principles to landlords and agents in a bid to crack down on excessive tenant data collection.Alongside a spate of new privacy mechanisms aimed at the collection, use and destruction of tenants’ personal information, the Minns government declared a forthcoming “standard rental application form” to make clear what information “can and can’t be collected”.The government – which estimated around 187,000 pieces of identification information are collected from NSW renters every week – said the bill “will stop the unnecessary collection of extra personal information” and help “reduce the risk of identity theft and data breaches”.“Renters shouldn’t have to trade away their privacy just to find a place to live,” said NSW Rental Commissioner Trina Jones.“This legislation will see sensible limits on what information can be collected in a rental application, creating a fairer and more consistent process, and gives rental applicants more control over their personal data.”Penalties for failing to follow the new privacy rules are capped at $11,000 for individuals and $49,500 for corporations.Leonard BernardoneLeonard Bernardone is an award-winning techie and writer based in Melbourne. After six years working across multiple startup businesses, Leonard now works as a freelance journalist. His work strives to spread awareness, cyber safety, and technical innovation.Tags:nswreal estatephotosaidoctoringdataprivacy