Close Menu
thewitness.com.au
  • Home
  • Latest
  • National News
  • International News
  • Sports
  • Business & Economy
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Entertainment

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

The ‘crazy car salesman’ brokering babies and holding embryos ‘hostage’

May 23, 2026

Shay Mitchell fears ‘wrinkles’ ahead of family’s plans for summer

May 23, 2026

Meet Albo, the high-vis, small-biz raider – and other deepfakes

May 23, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads
thewitness.com.au
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Latest
  • National News
  • International News
  • Sports
  • Business & Economy
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
thewitness.com.au
Home»Latest»Meet Albo, the high-vis, small-biz raider – and other deepfakes
Latest

Meet Albo, the high-vis, small-biz raider – and other deepfakes

info@thewitness.com.auBy info@thewitness.com.auMay 23, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
Meet Albo, the high-vis, small-biz raider – and other deepfakes
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Threads Bluesky Copy Link


May 24, 2026 — 5:00am

You have reached your maximum number of saved items.

Remove items from your saved list to add more.

Pity the man who attempts tax reform in the age of artificial intelligence. Anthony Albanese is that man, and so far, the internet has been unkind, although not nearly as unkind as it could be, and as it undoubtedly would be if the prime minister was a woman.

Since Labor unveiled its plans in the budget to roll back capital gains tax concessions (among other things), the prime minister has been the subject of a meme-powered social media campaign, depicting him as the gormless, grinning, self-appointed co-owner of small businesses across the country. The man who started the meme parade, business founder Frank Greeff, posted the first AI-doctored effort online.

In it, the prime minister is sandwiched between Greeff and his business partner, giving Greeff a fist-bump, above a caption that reads: “Every Australian founder just got a new-co founder with 47 per cent equity.”

This is a misleading distortion of Labor’s proposed policy, which is to remove the 50 per cent discount on capital gains that people like Greeff have previously enjoyed, courtesy of the taxpayer. But like all the best disinformation, there is a thin, oily residue of truth in it. The 47 per cent is a reference to the top marginal tax rate, which business owners could pay – in the single year they sell their business – if their capital gain is large enough.

That is quite different to the government nationalising a near-50 per cent stake in a business.

But hey, this is the internet, right? Memes often employ irony, and effective rhetoric is needed to win any argument.

Greeff encouraged other business owners to follow suit, and they did. Dodgy AI versions of the prime minister were photoshopped into beauty clinics and pizza parlours. A company called Asset Landscapes depicted the PM in high-vis, announcing him as Employee of the Month. “Albo has come in hard and strong, rolled up his sleeves, pushed hard and has also come onboard and taken a 47 per cent equity [stake] in the business. Good on ya Albo, you’re a great bloke. He is a real champion for the working class.” And then a clown emoji.

Of course, as Greeff, the architect of the campaign, pointed out in an interview with the ABC: “Not all businesses are going to be taxed at 47 per cent, that’s correct.”

Related Article

An example of the memes labelling Anthony Albanese as a 47 per cent ‘business partner’.

(Taxing a business is also quite distinct from acquiring equity in it, but hey, details.)

“I had a choice,” Greeff explained. “Do you do something that is bold and that is going to catch fire on the internet and that gets enough attention to create a conversation? Ultimately, that’s all I’m looking for.”

And then he said the quiet part out loud: “That’s just kind of like the truth of social media and [what] attention is like, unfortunately – the more nuance you have, the quicker someone will scroll past and not really care about what you’re saying.”

It was quite a remarkable admission, and absolutely correct.

Excruciating attempts by Chalmers and Albanese to explain their tax policy have had the distinct flavour of content that “someone will scroll past and not really care about what you’re saying”.

Nuance is a real vibe killer. Context makes for bad content.

It’s all good business for Ed Coper, a political communications expert who has just published a book called Angertainment: How social media outrage ruins everything. Coper has advised the Albanese government on internet-driven misinformation, particularly around the campaign for the failed Voice to Parliament referendum.

The social media-driven backlash to the CGT changes is perfect timing for his book – it proves his point nicely.

Coper told me: “One of the questions of the book is, ‘Can we have nice things any more? Can we do evidence-based policy reform in this environment?’ Social media reduces everything to an emotive catchphrase stripped of all the context; that’s what a meme is. Where you have social hysteria and noise, backed in by legacy media which covers it, you can’t even have piecemeal sensible reform, let alone anything substantial.”

Related Article

‘Angertainment’ – content designed to rage-bait audiences in pursuit of attention – is more popular than ever on social media platforms.

Coper says “our only hope” is that governments can hold their nose through social media outrage and trust that it’s not necessarily representative of community concern.

(It should be noted, for the record, that Coper worked on Labor’s “Mediscare” campaign during the 2016 election, which took a tiny kernel of truth and beat it up into a fear that then-PM Malcolm Turnbull had plans to privatise Medicare. When I interviewed Coper in 2022, he called the campaign “a competition for the dominant narrative”.)

We live in a democracy and people are entitled to marshal whatever tools they like to argue their corner. Irony and satire are effective forms of critique. But when AI-powered disinformation is allowed to front-run debates, we might take a moment to consider the effect on our democracy.

The arc of trolling on social media often bends towards misogyny, and if the prime minister or the treasurer were a woman, the memes might easily be deepfake nudes of her selling her tax policy.

Related Article

Jim Chalmers and Angus Taylor

A few weeks ago, Italian Prime Minister Georgia Meloni called out a deepfake image of her wearing lingerie, which was being shared online. Julia Gillard famously had to contend with idiot cartoonists who put naked sketches of her on nasty little blogs. Nothing so quaint would be required now – the equivalent idiot would just run a full-length photo of the female PM through a de-clothing app, and post it on X. With the right algorithmic settings, millions of voters could see such an image within hours. At that point, any policy she was proposing would be less than irrelevant.

Hyperbole about the Albanese/Chalmers changes was not confined to social media, of course. One newspaper account quoted a business founder who felt “personally attacked” by the changes.

In 2014, former Liberal treasurer Joe Hockey brought down his 2014 budget, with its deep cuts to public services including Medicare. A couple of years prior, he gave a landmark speech about ending the “age of entitlement”. Hockey was talking about the alleged entitlement mentality of people on welfare. Now we seem to be in a new age of entitlement, where any moderation of tax concessions enjoyed for many years by a select few is perceived as a personal attack.

Perhaps the changes are horrendous for the economy and will murder aspiration. Perhaps they constitute a drive-by shooting on the diligence and decency of small business people and mum-and-dad shareholders. Certainly, they are harder to argue for without a corresponding cut in income tax. But we will only find out if we debate the actual proposal, not its meme-ified, ironic internet avatar.

In the rationalist tradition, the use of emotive language is a sign you’re losing the argument. Now, it seems to be the best way to win it.

Jacqueline Maley is a columnist and senior writer.

Get a weekly wrap of views that will challenge, champion and inform your own. Sign up for our Opinion newsletter.

You have reached your maximum number of saved items.

Remove items from your saved list to add more.

From our partners

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest Bluesky Threads Tumblr Telegram Email
info@thewitness.com.au
  • Website

Related Posts

The ‘crazy car salesman’ brokering babies and holding embryos ‘hostage’

May 23, 2026

Shay Mitchell fears ‘wrinkles’ ahead of family’s plans for summer

May 23, 2026

Australia's Caldwell kicks to victory

May 23, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top Posts

Police believe ‘Penthouse Syndicate’ built Sydney property empire from defrauded millions

September 24, 2025225 Views

Inside the bitter fight for ownership of a popular sports website

October 23, 2025153 Views

Wife of Australian Community Media boss responds to husband’s assault charges

March 15, 2026115 Views
Don't Miss

The ‘crazy car salesman’ brokering babies and holding embryos ‘hostage’

By info@thewitness.com.auMay 23, 2026

The new parents said they learnt of their son’s arrival from a photo of a…

Shay Mitchell fears ‘wrinkles’ ahead of family’s plans for summer

May 23, 2026

Meet Albo, the high-vis, small-biz raider – and other deepfakes

May 23, 2026

Australia's Caldwell kicks to victory

May 23, 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Top Trending
Demo
Most Popular

Police believe ‘Penthouse Syndicate’ built Sydney property empire from defrauded millions

September 24, 2025225 Views

Inside the bitter fight for ownership of a popular sports website

October 23, 2025153 Views

Wife of Australian Community Media boss responds to husband’s assault charges

March 15, 2026115 Views
Our Picks

The ‘crazy car salesman’ brokering babies and holding embryos ‘hostage’

May 23, 2026

Shay Mitchell fears ‘wrinkles’ ahead of family’s plans for summer

May 23, 2026

Meet Albo, the high-vis, small-biz raider – and other deepfakes

May 23, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Home
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.