Thousands of Australian Workers Could Be Risking Termination with AI Policy Blunders
9News
ENRICHED
Details
- Date Published
- 10 Feb 2026
- Priority Score
- 2
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 10 Feb 2026, 02:00 am
Description
<p>That&#x27;s concerning when close to 20 per cent admit they use AI at work at least once a day.</p>
Summary
The article reveals that a significant portion of Australian workers are unaware of their employers’ AI use policies, potentially leading to job termination for policy breaches. With nearly 20% of respondents using AI daily, the lack of clarity around workplace AI policies poses a risk to both employee job security and company data integrity. Expert comments highlight that breaches in AI-related confidentiality or privacy policies can result in severe disciplinary actions. Although the article touches on AI policy issues, its focus is more related to workplace management rather than addressing existential or catastrophic AI risks directly. This highlights the need for better AI governance frameworks in workplaces to mitigate potential mishandlings.
Body
Exclusive: Only one in three Australian workers know if their employer has an artificial intelligence use policy, let alone what it entails, according to a nine.com.au reader poll.That could cause major problems, including possible termination, for workers who are found to have used AI in a way that breaches their employer's AI use policy."Consequences will generally follow the same logic as any other workplace policy breach," Giuseppe Carabetta, an associate professor of workplace and business law at the University of Technology Sydney, told nine.com.au.LIVE UPDATES: NSW Premier defends police after 'incendiary' mass protestAussie workers could be risking termination by using AI without knowing their employer's policy. (Nine/Getty)"The Fair Work tribunal has upheld dismissals where employees breach data handling, privacy, social media, and information security policies."Of the poll respondents who are currently employed, close to 20 per cent admitted they use AI at work at least daily.Of these people, nearly half admitted they rely on it multiple times a day.A futher 19 per cent said they use AI weekly, while more than 60 per cent said they never use AI on the job.ROYALS: King Charles' explosive declaration as police probe brother's Epstein linksOf those who do use AI at work, the majority said they only use ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and other AI tools for minor tasks like writing emails and checking spelling.Nearly one in three use AI to produce work like reports and presentations.About 10 per cent use it for other tasks like translating, researching, writing feedback, producing artwork and "finding answers to questions asked by customers".A little over 10 per cent admitted their employer is unaware of their AI use at work and 15 per cent are unsure if their boss knows they use AI.More concerningly, only 32 per cent of Aussies who use AI at work actually know if their employer has an AI use policy and what it entails.READ MORE: Sydney couple 'had it all' but four words from their kids caused them to give it all up"Even without a policy, an employer could still discipline an employee if AI use caused a privacy breach, disclosure of confidential information, reputational damage, or unsafe or discriminatory outcome," Carabetta said.If there's no AI policy, workers can protect themselves in a few ways: never put confidential information into public AI tools; only use employer‑approved or 'secure' AI systems; and follow any other existing employer policies.If in doubt, workers can also ask an authorised manager what AI use is permitted."If the worker knew the rules and ignored them, then even a first offence may justify termination," Carabetta said."Especially where confidentiality or client trust is undermined."The nine.com.au poll, which runs once a fortnight, canvases the views of the Nine audience on 9Nation, which is an online community of our readers and viewers.Have you got a story? Contact reporter Maddison Leach at mleach@nine.com.auNEVER MISS A STORY: Get your breaking news and exclusive stories first by following us across all platforms.Download the 9NEWS App here via Apple and Google PlayMake 9News your preferred source on Google by ticking this box hereSign up to our breaking newsletter here