I have stuff to do on Thursday & Friday that means I can't pay attention to the internet, so Josh will keep you informed with the latest tech stuff until I return on Monday the 3rd of April.
Old mate Sam Bankman-Fried's bail conditions have changed. SBF now has to "use a non-smartphone provided by the court with no internet capability", "a laptop with a limited software suite that can only access pre-approved websites" and is not "allowed on any video game that would allow him to use voice chat". He also had a new criminal charged added to his plate - "authorized and directed a bribe of at least $40 million to one or more Chinese government officials". Meanwhile, Binance, the world's largest crypto exchange has been sued by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission for "willful evasion of federal law and operating an illegal digital asset derivatives exchange".
The eSafety Commissioner said yesterday that while the updated Online Safety Codes devised by industry have "come some way" since the first draft, there are still some "red line issues" that if they aren't addressed to her satisfaction by the 31st of March, will result in the Commissioner making the codes themselves and industry having no input. That "red line" issue is for "designated internet services" and "relevant electronic services" (i.e: basically every platform on the internet) "are proactively seeking out child sexual abuse materials and terrorist content". I'll leave you to come up with your own theories as to why eSafety didn't simply make these codes themselves when developing the Online Safety Act.
Law firm Salinger Privacy has a great article going into detail about the proposed Privacy Act reforms and outlined six things they want to see in the draft legislation. Get rid of small business exemptions, details for direct marketing have to be collected directly from the individual or if purchased the person has to give explicit consent again, a "fair and reasonable" test to determine if a company really needs that data to operate, consent to collect and use data is only valid if the individual has a way to say no to a specific request, trading personal info can't be the reason the data is collected and the definition of personal information includes any info that allows someone to be singled out and acted upon. All common sense, smart stuff I reckon.
A golden telephone presented in 1962 to the Director-General of Posts and Telegraphs to commemorate the first telephone designed and manufactured in Australia. I took this photo at the Victorian Telecommunications Museum in 2019. It's supposed to re-open any day now as the National Telecommunications Museum.
📻 Last Day Of Magic - The Kills
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