Just look at them. (Thanks, Marion!)
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Tag: australia
A woman’s stalker compromised her car’s app, giving him the ability to track and immobilize it
An Australian woman’s creepy, violent ex-boyfriend hacked her phone using stalkerware, then used that, along with her car’s VIN number, to hack the remote control app for her car (possibly Landrover’s Incontrol app), which allowed him to track her location, stop and start her car, and adjust the car’s temperature.
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The rich poop different: measuring inequality with sewage
In Social, demographic, and economic correlates of food and chemical consumption measured by wastewater-based epidemiology, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, a group of researchers in Australia and Norway present their analysis of a 2016 Australian sewage census, which sampled 22 waste-water treatment facilities and looked for 42 biomarkers.
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Far-right Australian billionaire demands $500k and a vow of silence from a satirical vlogger
Australian billionaire Clive Palmer has earned a reputation for being…colourful.
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Australia wants to kill consent requirement in proposed data-sharing legislation, calls it “nuance”
Australia has a pending, comprehensive “data sharing” law that regulates the dispersal of data collected by the Australian state; in a new government white-paper, the Australian state has proposed that the rules could gain “nuance” if the government were allowed to share data without obtaining consent from the people whose privacy is implicated in that sharing.
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Australia’s raids on journalists signal an authoritarian turning point
Yesterday’s spectacular series of raids on Australian journalists by the Australian Federal Police are a turning point in how democracies view the role of the press and leaks: the raid targeted News Corp’s Annika Smethurst over her reporting on a secret plan to grant the Australian Signals Directorate — a spy agency — the power to surveil Australians; 2GB radio’s Ben Fordham over his reporting on human rights abuses of refugees; and ABC Sydney’s offices over their 2017 Afghan files reports, which documented war-crimes and other misconduct by Australian military personnel.
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Just look at this vintage “banana candle” recipe
Your kid’s “smart watch” lets anyone in the world trace their location. Again.
Back in 2017, the Norwegian Consumer Council published a damning report on the privacy leaks from kids’ “smart watches,” a parade of horrors that included allowing unauthorized third parties to trace your kid’s location, and also to covertly eavesdrop through the watches’ microphones and bark creepy orders at them through their speakers.
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The Chinafication of the internet continues as the UK proposes blocking any service that hosts “illegal” or “harmful” material
Last year the US Congress passed SESTA/FOSTA, an “anti-sex-trafficking bill” that has resulted in the shuttering of all the services formerly used by sex workers to vet their johns, massively increasing the personal physical risk borne by sex-workers and reinvigorating the dying pimping industry, as sex workers seek out protectors.
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After Christchurch shooting, Australia doubles down on being stampeded into catastrophically stupid tech laws
Australia leads “developed democracies” in the adoption of poorly thought-through, dangerous tech laws, thanks to its ban on working cryptography, rushed through in late 2018; now, with no debate or consultation, the Australian Parliament has passed a law that gives tech companies one hour to remove “violent materials” from their platforms with penalties for noncompliance of up to 10% of annual global turnover.
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