Here are a few I have come across the last week or so. Note: Each link is followed by a title and a few paragraphs. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.
General Comment
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The big news this week is the major breach of the Parliament’s internal network. If they can’t secure these endpoints what hope have all those GPs connected to the myHR?
Otherwise more and more going on as we move into the new year proper.
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‘Security incident’ forces MPs to reset passwords
No evidence yet to indicate data was accessed or parliamentary process disrupted
A ‘security incident’ has hit the parliamentary computing network, the system used by MPs, senators and their staff.
All users with access to the network were prompted to change their passwords this morning, after they were hard reset last night.
The move was “undertaken for abundance of caution” a statement from the network’s presiding officers – House of Representatives speaker Tony Smith and Senate President Scott Ryan – said this morning.
The Department of Parliamentary Services (DPS) and other agencies are now working to investigate the incident, the department said, “while our immediate focus has been on securing the network and protecting data and users”.
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Australian government computing network reset following security 'incident'
Department of Parliamentary Services says there is no evidence to suggest data has been taken or accessed, or that the incident is part of a plan to influence electoral processes.
The federal government has confirmed it experienced a security incident across its computer network -- affecting everyone with an Australian Parliament House email address, including politicians and all of their staff.
A statement from the Department of Parliamentary Services (DPS) said all user passwords that have network access were reset throughout Thursday evening and Friday morning as a result of the incident.
"The Department of Parliamentary Services and relevant agencies are working jointly to take the necessary steps to investigate the incident, while our immediate focus has been on securing the network and protecting data and users," the statement read.
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MPs demand answers after cyber attack
- 12:00AM February 9, 2019
Federal MPs have called for top bureaucrats to be hauled before the parliamentary intelligence and security committee amid concerns foreign hackers may have breached the IT systems of politicians.
Labor MP Anthony Byrne, the deputy chair of the parliamentary joint committee on intelligence and security, has demanded an explanation from the heads of the Department of Parliamentary Services and the Australian Signals Directorate after the parliamentary systems came under attack yesterday, forcing all MPs to change passwords.
The head of Australian Cyber Security Centre, Alastair MacGibbon, and Australian Signals Directorate director-general Mike Burgess were called to Parliament House yesterday after MPs were warned parliament’s systems were the subject of a cyber security “incident”.
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Foreign government suspected in federal MP computer hack
Updated Feb 8, 2019 — 1.24pm, first published at 12.43pm
A foreign government is suspected of being behind an attack on federal MP's computers, which has resulted in all passwords of users on the parliamentary computing network needing to be changed.
The attack was confirmed on Friday morning, with a joint statement by House speaker Tony Smith and Senator Scott Ryan saying there was no evidence that any data had been accessed or taken, but an investigation was underway by security agencies.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison refused to give any detailed commentary, but said there was no indication that a government department agency was the target of the intrusion.
Cyber security expert and creator of Have I Been Pwned? Troy Hunt told The Australian Financial Review an attack of this level of sophistication is usually from a state-based actor.
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Security breach strikes parliament's IT network
All passwords reset.
Parliamentarians and their staff have been forced to reset passwords after an apparent malicious attack against the parliamentary computing network overnight.
In a statement, Parliament's presiding officers said it was one of a number of measures taken by the Department of Parliamentary Services to protected the network and its more than 4000 users.
“One specific measure, undertaken for abundance of caution, has been to reset all user passwords that have network access,” they said.
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Federal MPs' computer network hacked, forcing passwords to be changed
By David Wroe
February 8, 2019 — 10.21am
Hackers have infiltrated Federal Parliament’s computer network in the latest breach of major national systems in which authorities cannot rule out that MPs' data might have been stolen.
The top MPs who oversee Parliament have confirmed that security agencies are now investigating the incident and urgent action has been taken to protect the network, including the changing of all passwords.
All MPs, including ministers, use the parliamentary network. House Speaker Tony Smith and Senate President Scott Ryan said it was too early to say who might have been behind the attack.
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China link possible in cyber attack on Australian Parliament computer system, ABC understands
By political reporter Stephanie Borys
Updated
Australia's security agencies are investigating a cyber breach of the Federal Parliament's computer network that the ABC understands is likely the result of a foreign government attack.
Key points:
- Authorities are yet to uncover any evidence that data was stolen in the breach
- Computer passwords were reset as a precaution as investigations continue
- The hackers were caught in the early stages of gaining access to the system, sources say
The agencies are looking into whether China is behind the incident.
In a statement, Federal Parliament's presiding officers said authorities were yet to detect any evidence data had been stolen in the breach.
One source said the response to the attack had been swift but the hackers were "sophisticated this time around".
Computer passwords have been reset as a precaution as the investigations continue.
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Australian security services investigate attempted cyber attack on parliament
ASIO among agencies looking at hacking attempt in Canberra amid suspicion a state-based actor could be to blame for would-be data breach
Fri 8 Feb 2019 11.31 AEDT First published on Fri 8 Feb 2019 11.02 AEDT
Australia’s security agencies are urgently investigating an attempt to hack the federal parliament’s computer network, with the parliament unable to rule out a foreign government being behind the attack.
In a joint statement, Scott Ryan and Tony Smith – parliament’s presiding officers – reported a “security incident on the parliamentary computing network” occurred overnight and into Friday morning.
No data breach has been reported, and they said all passwords had been reset out of “an abundance of caution”.
“Similarly, we have no evidence that this is an attempt to influence the outcome of parliamentary processes or to disrupt or influence electoral or political processes,” they said.
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RACGP outlines minimum requirements needed for GP software
Hafizah Osman | 05 Feb 2019
The current processes around many clinical information systems are “not patient or GP-centred” and is “highly inefficient and frustrating for general practice”, according to a report by the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP).
The RACGP Practice Technology and Management report claimed that current clinical information systems (CIS) tend to be a “heavy burden for GPs and their teams”, diverting their time away from providing medical care for patients.
As such, the peak lobby group for GPs is calling for industry to meet a number of general practice CIS requirements to improve usability in the collection, management, use and sharing of information and deliver on efficient patient care.
The report outlines recommendations for better digital patient health records, systems to improve the exchange of patient information across the healthcare sector, patient consent in the secondary use of their data and amplified information security.
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Making data work: can real-time prescribing save lives?
A recent inquest highlights the risks of opioid-addicted patients doctor shopping to obtain medication. Mr William House was just 30 years old when he accidentally overdosed on a combination of OxyContin and fentanyl patches (opioid prescription medications used to alleviate symptoms of chronic pain). He was found near death by his sister on 28 August 2018, and was unable to be revived. The cause of death was found to be acute fentanyl poisoning, and his case was one of just four examined by Coroner James McDougall in his findings delivered on 21 May 2018.[1]
Like the other individuals whose deaths were examined in the inquest, Mr House’s use of the opioids had begun following a severe injury several years prior, from which he suffered chronic back and ankle pain along with debilitating headaches. He was initially prescribed opioid medications in order to manage his pain. Unfortunately, like many others, Mr House became addicted to the medications prescribed to help him, and began seeking higher and higher doses. Over the years he attended many different GPs and hospitals and was also under the care of a pain specialist.
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February 6 2019 - 12:23PM
More sick people using free telehealth after hours service
· Chris McLennan
The number of sick Katherine people using the telehealth service has grown.
Sick people in Katherine and Tindal are becoming more comfortable talking to doctors via phone or video.
Health authorities say the number of local residents using the new after-hours tele-health service is growing.
One of the problems is many people say they still don’t know the service even exists.
Residents from Katherine and Tindal can use the After-Hours HealthNow service by calling 1800 931 165 (toll-free).
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Benchmark Awards 2019 Finalist: National Blood Authority deploys BloodNet5
Network revamp sates Australia’s bloodlust.
The National Blood Authority, who coordinates the management and delivery of Australia’s blood supply, has overhauled the BloodNet platform underpinning its lifesaving work.
Work to modernise BloodNet4 began in late 2016, with an aim to reduce millions of dollars of wasted blood and making it easier, more efficient and cost-effective for healthcare professionals to order blood and blood products.
The logistics behind BloodNet are complex - different blood components like platelets, plasma and red blood cells have differing shelf lives, and it can take donations from four separate people to provide one transfusion of platelets that must be used within five days.
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The RACGP’s technology survey results are in
The survey explored knowledge and experience of eHealth technologies, barriers and drivers, and education and training needs.
The RACGP’s Views and attitudes towards technological innovation in general practice: Survey report 2018 incorporates results from the 1762 GPs who participated in the survey.
The survey is designed to gain insights into GPs’ use of technology in Australia, assist the RACGP in understanding what systems are being used, where future investment is needed and the key technology challenges faced by general practice teams.
It also details a number of RACGP resources to support implementation and effective use of eHealth technologies in general practice.
‘GPs report that technology has led to improved practice efficiencies and more effective collaboration with other healthcare providers, resulting in improved continuity of care and better patient outcomes,’ Dr Rob Hosking, Chair of the RACGP Expert Committee – Practice Technology and Management (REC–PTM), said.
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The survey is designed to gain insights into GPs’ use of technology in Australia, assist the RACGP in understanding what systems are being used, where future investment is needed and the key technology challenges faced by general practice teams.
It also details a number of RACGP resources to support implementation and effective use of eHealth technologies in general practice.
‘GPs report that technology has led to improved practice efficiencies and more effective collaboration with other healthcare providers, resulting in improved continuity of care and better patient outcomes,’ Dr Rob Hosking, Chair of the RACGP Expert Committee – Practice Technology and Management (REC–PTM), said.
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Artificial Intelligence luring the best researchers, big pharma missing out
By Cade Metz
Feb 8, 2019 — 11.00pm
You can think of it as a World Cup of biochemical research.
Every two years, hundreds of scientists enter a global competition. Tackling a biological puzzle they call "the protein folding problem", they try to predict the three-dimensional shape of proteins in the human body. No one knows how to solve the problem. Even the winners only chip away at it. But a solution could streamline the way scientists create new medicines and fight disease.
Mohammed AlQuraishi, a biologist who has dedicated his career to this kind of research, flew in early December to Cancun, Mexico, where academics were gathering to discuss the results of the latest contest. As he checked into his hotel, a five-star resort on the Caribbean, he was consumed by melancholy.
The protein folding problem is an attempt to predict the three-dimensional shape of proteins in the human body.
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Malicious attacks rise in Australia's latest data breach numbers
Phishing and brute-force attacks target credentials.
The number of Australian organisations reporting data breaches climbed to new heights last quarter, with the majority continuing to result from malicious or criminal attack.
The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) said [pdf] it received 262 notifications in the third full quarter of the scheme’s operation, slightly higher than the 245 it received between July and September last year.
The OAIC said the results again reflected the need for improved staff training and security systems.
The majority of breaches continued to be the result of malicious or criminal attacks, which accounted for 168 notifications or 64 percent – a seven percent rise on the previous quarter.
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Corruption investigators swoop on Queensland's PAS project
Queensland eHealth chief executive Dr Richard Ashby resigns following allegations of undeclared relationship
Queensland eHealth chief executive Dr Richard Ashby has resigned following allegations of an undeclared relationship involving an individual linked to the replacement of the state’s Patient Administration System (PAS).
The roll out of the replacement PAS has been halted, while the Queensland Crime and Corruption Commission investigates.
Queensland Health director-general Michael Walsh said in a statement he had "provided allegations to a senior eHealth Queensland executive about a potential undeclared conflict of interest regarding an alleged relationship with a staff member“ involved with the PAS replacement.
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Can blockchain revolutionise healthcare in Australia?
Nelson Petracek | 06 Feb 2019
Data is a critical asset in the healthcare industry – our medical professionals rely on accurate and up-to-date clinical information in order to best assist patients. But in Australia, there have been concerns around the use and management of this data in healthcare.
There is an ongoing debate surrounding the security of the government’s digital record-keeping system, My Health Record. This has been compounded by the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) recently reporting 42 breaches which affected My Health Record during the 2017-2018 financial year.
Following this, critics have called for the full rollout of My Health Record to be further delayed in order for the platform’s architecture to be better assessed – if it’s simply a ‘honey pot’ of personal and compromising clinical data or can the potential for privacy breaches be limited to an acceptable level?
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Fraudsters steal thousands in new scam targeting mobile numbers
- 9:07AM February 6, 2019
Fraudsters are stealing thousands of dollars from Australian consumers and draining their bank accounts in a new scam involving the theft of mobile numbers.
The Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman is warning of the scam, which involves a fraudster stealing a consumer’s mobile number by convincing their telco to switch the number to a new SIM card in the fraudster’s possession.
Once the fraudster has access to a consumer’s mobile number they can use it to access the consumer’s bank account, emails, and other online accounts, often stealing thousands of dollars.
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QUT poaches Metro North Hospital CIO
Cathy Ford to replace Judy Stokker.
The Queensland University of Technology has revealed Cathy Ford as its new chief information officer, who will take over the role from Judy Stokker following her retirement.
Ford joins the university from Brisbane’s Metro North Hospital and Health Service, where she led IT since December 2017.
Other stints within the Queensland health system include a year as the chief digital officer at eHealth Queensland, and a year as senior director of ICT Strategy & Innovation at Queensland Health.
Ford previously spent four years working at Data#3 in Brisbane, most recently as general manager of Information, Productivity and Technology.
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Australian government clamping down on security research, academic says
Dr Vanessa Teague says the government has declined to reissue a key permit for cryptography research
Prominent cyber security researcher Dr Vanessa Teague says that Australian cryptography research is under threat from a decision by the Defence Export Controls office to alter an agreement with the University of Melbourne.
Teague, an associate professor at the university, was one of the researchers who found a significant security flaw in New South Wales’ iVote system as well as discovered the flawed deidentification of supposedly anonymous Department of Health data.
Teague told Computerworld that she was recently notified that Defence would not renew a general permit allowing her to undertake international collaboration on cryptography research.
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AMP rocked by data theft from Chinese contractor
Updated Feb 7, 2019 — 9.48am, first published at 9.43am
Listed wealth giant AMP has been hit by a data theft attempt by a contractor, who tried to flee Australia after he was caught for allegedly stealing identity documents from 20 customers.
The 28-year old AMP contractor allegedly downloaded dozens of identity documents from 20 different customers at AMP and sent them to his personal email account.
The Chinese national was arrested by the Australian Board Force officers as he tried to flee the country by boarding on a flight to China around midday on January 17.
When investigators searched him and his luggage they found mobile phones, sim cards, a laptop and numerous electronic storage devices. The Financial Crimes Squad of NSW State Police are continuing to examine the devices.
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More than 800 data breaches reported to Australian privacy watchdog in 2018
Phishing a key source of data breaches in final quarter of year
Data from the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) reveals that last year it received 812 notifications as part of the mandatory breach reporting regime.
The OAIC today released its quarterly report on the Notifiable Data Breaches regime covering reports it received in the last three months of 2018.
In the October to December period the privacy watchdog said it received 262 breach notifications — a 7 per cent rise on the tally from the prior quarter. It was the highest number of notifications that the office has received in a single quarter since the scheme commenced in late February 2018.
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GP facing $600k defamation suit after Facebook stoush
She publicly accused a rival doctor of stealing her ideas on Medicare billing
7th February 2019
A high-profile GP is facing a $600,000 defamation lawsuit after she went on Facebook to accuse a rival of stealing her ideas on effective ways to bill Medicare.
Dr April Armstrong is the founder of Business for Doctors, which provides advice on issues such as tax, superannuation and investment.
But in September 2017 she claimed Dr Rajan Anand, a GP from Adelaide, had copied her educational material and case studies after attending her workshops on Medicare billing to set up his own training enterprise.
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Orion Health’s McCrae to take firm private
Thursday, 7 February 2019
Orion Health Group’s founder and biggest shareholder, Ian McCrae, is leading a consortium to end the healthcare software developer’s four-year stint as a public company.
Macrae personally holds almost 86 per cent of the outstanding stock and has pooled that stake with other investors, including Compac founder Hamish Kennedy’s 5.3 per cent holding, to make the takeover a certainty by crossing the 90 per cent threshold needed to mop-up the remaining shares.
The new entity – Grafton Health Holdings – will offer $1.224 a share, or $5.9 million, to buy the 7 per cent it doesn’t yet own and will enforce Takeovers Code provisions to do so.
The majority of Orion shareholders took up a share buy-back in December to exit the firm after agreeing to a radical overhaul, in which its profitable Rhapsody business was sold to UK private equity for $205 million. The firm’s holding in the population health management division was also diluted, leaving it with full ownership of the hospitals unit.
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Northern DHBs one step closer to a regional clinical portal
Thursday, 7 February 2019
Northland and Auckland district health boards have been given the green light for the long-awaited upgrade to their clinical record portal.
The two DHBs’ current system, Concerto 6, will be replaced with the latest version of Orion Health’s clinical record viewing software Clinical Portal 8 by early 2020.
The project follows the successful implementation of Clinical Portal 8 at Counties Manukau and Waitematā DHBs in 2018.
It will result in a single, connected clinical viewing system that will deliver a patient-centric record accessible from any Northern Region DHB location, including authenticated health providers.
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AEHRC and Fiona Stanley Hospital collaborate to develop and pilot mobile app with specialist advice for burn patients
The app aims to reduce unnecessary patient wait times, enable them to receive quick and timely specialist advice, and bring efficient healthcare to remote Australians.
February 08, 2019 04:10 AM
An Australian-developed app is combining mobile phones with telehealth principles to bring burns sufferers fast, accurate and secure specialist advice from clinicians.
Telehealth researchers from CSIRO’s Australian e-Health Research Centre (AEHRC) have collaborated with the Fiona Stanley Hospital, part of the South Metropolitan Health Service in Perth, to develop and pilot thi As recovering from a burn can be a slow process, the Fiona Stanley Hospital runs a Burns Early Discharge Programme for patients to leave hospital and receive ongoing care from home.
The MICE app is being trialed as part of this program to let a visiting nurse take photos of the patient’s wounds and send those photos to clinicians and specialists for ongoing monitoring and advice without having to visit hospital.
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Canberra ignoring 'overwhelming empirical evidence' on encryption busting
Associate professor Vanessa Teague believes Canberra is ignoring efforts from experts to explain why the encryption-busting laws are the wrong approach.
University of Melbourne associate professor Vanessa Teague has told a forum that despite Canberra trying to not break stuff, that it is exactly what is happening as the government ignores warnings on the implications of its recently legislated encryption-busting laws.
"We've all spent a lot of effort ... patiently explaining that you can't just open encryption when nice police officers are trying to read terrorists' data, and yet keep everyone else's data secure -- and nevertheless, this long history of nicely explaining stuff to them has not worked," Teague said on Wednesday.
"It is my natural inclination to pursue a strategy like that, but as a person committed to empirical science, there seems to be overwhelming empirical evidence that this is not the right strategy."
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CA chief says 'dangerous' encryption law needs repair
- 08 February 2019
- Written by Sam Varghese
Communications Alliance chief John Stanton has urged the IT industry to highlight the changes needed in the Federal Government's encryption law that was passed last year, telling a forum in Sydney on Thursday that there was an urgent need "to try to repair this dangerous piece of legislation".
"The bill, as passed, still raises serious concerns for many stakeholders on a range of fronts, including the scope of the powers given to agencies, the damaging impact of the legislation on the Australian IT industry, the dangers posed by the bill’s interaction with international laws, the weakness of consultation and assessment provisions and many more," he said.
Present at the forum were representatives from the Alliance for a Safe and Secure Internet which includes ACCAN, Access Now, AI Group, AIIA, Amnesty International Australia, AMTA, Blueprint for Free Speech, Communications Alliance, DIGI, Digital Rights Watch, Future Wise, Hack for Privacy, Human Rights Law Centre, Internet Australia, IoTAA, and Liberty Victoria, who together represent consumers, human rights organisations, business, industry and a wide range of technology companies.
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Encryption changes on the cards
- 12:00AM February 7, 2019
The federal government will consider changes to its new encryption laws when parliament returns next week, avoiding a pre-election meltdown by Labor over additional safeguards to the new anti-terror powers.
A raft of proposed Labor amendments to the bill, which gives spy agencies new powers to access encrypted messages, have been listed for debate next week, and are expected to be voted on after a likely interim report from the parliamentary joint committee on intelligence and security.
The Australian Federal Police says the new encryption laws have already been used to compel accused offenders in drug and child exploitation cases to hand over passwords to electronic devices, while intelligence watchdogs have called for more resources to monitor the use of new powers by spy agencies.
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AFP says it is readying notices under encryption law
- 04 February 2019
- Written by Sam Varghese
The Australian Federal Police says it is in the process of issuing technical assistance requests under the recently passed federal encryption law, and is discussing with the communications providers concerned what kind of assistance should be offered to them after the orders are issued.
In a submission to the ongoing inquiry into the law, which was passed by Parliament on 6 December, the AFP said these TARs were sought to support ongoing investigations into what it called "serious Commonwealth crime".
The Home Affairs Department, in a submission to the same inquiry, has said the new powers in what is officially known as the Telecommunications and Other Legislation Amendment (Assistance and Access) Act 2018 — which is being referred to as the TOLA Act — were already being used by law enforcement and national security agencies to support their work.
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Huawei security stance highlights why Canberra must fix its encryption mess
By Paul Smith
04 Feb 2019 — 11:00 AM
The parallels aren't exact, but those in Australia keen to see the evolution of a thriving local tech sector, should watch the way in which Huawei has effortlessly been positioned as the global embodiment of Chinese threat, and shudder at the shadow of suspicion our companies are now operating under.
In December the government – aided by a remarkable capitulation by opposition leader Bill Shorten – passed world-first laws to compel tech companies, (ranging from giants like Apple and Google, down to the smallest start-ups with online communication mechanisms,) to develop tools for authorities to crack the encryption that protects them.
The legislation was introduced as a terrorism and crime prevention tool, but was rammed through the parliament in such a rush (under the guise of protecting us against Christmas terror attacks,) that volumes of amendments were thrown in the bin at the last minute.
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Dreyfus expects govt to keep word on encryption law amendments
- 06 February 2019
- Written by Sam Varghese
The Australian Labor Party says it expects the matter of amendments to the encryption law passed last year will be taken up during the first sitting of Parliament this year, as agreed to by the government.
Shadow Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus told iTWire in response to queries that Labor was looking forward to government support for the amendments to be passed speedily.
He was reacting to a report by the website InnovationAus that Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton had stopped any move to deal with the amendments before the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security submitted its report from an ongoing review on 3 April.
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ACCC puts blame for slow NBN speed squarely on FTTN
Seeks action.
Fibre-to-the-node connections are acting as a drag on overall speed averages on the NBN, prompting calls for action to remediate problems or migrate more users onto cheaper plans.
In a surprising move - given how politically-charged debates around access technologies can be - the latest competition watchdog-commissioned broadband speed test report [pdf] breaks out data by access technology for the first time.
The move appears aimed at spurring action on consistent “underperformance” among NBN connections, which the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has called out in each of its speed reports.
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ACCC speed testing shows FttN lagging other connections
- 06 February 2019
- Written by Sam Varghese
Supplied
Testing of broadband speeds by the ACCC has shown that fibre-to-the-premises and hybrid fibre coaxial connections deliver about 86% to 87% of plan speeds during busy hours — 7pm to 11pm — compared to about 79% for fibre-to-the-node connections.
In its fourth Measuring Broadband Australia report, the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission said when under-performing services were removed, the results were comparable for all three technologies, at about 88%.
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Telstra blames NBN Co for rising copper costs
Consequence of Sky Muster satellite scope-creep.
Telstra says NBN Co’s decision to use Sky Muster for hard-to-serve premises on metropolitan fringes means higher costs to keep copper infrastructure online for tiny numbers of geographically-spread users.
The incumbent telco is on its once every four-to-five year bid to limit the damage of a cut to regulated prices for wholesale copper services, such as those used to supply ADSL and voice services.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has decided to continue regulating these prices until mid-2024.
This time around, Telstra is relying partially on scope creep in NBN Co’s Sky Muster rollout to justify keeping regulated prices stable.
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Labor again hints at NBN write-down if it is elected
- 04 February 2019
- Written by Sam Varghese
The Australian Labor Party has again hinted that it would look at a write-down of the value of the national broadband network if elected, a move that would bring down connection prices and help retail service providers.
Labor Shadow Communications Minister Michelle Rowland said in an interview with the Australian Financial Review that Labor would work to repair the economic issues facing the NBN and give users better connectivity.
Rowland had raised the idea of a write-down in October last year too, saying that the NBN Co, the company that is rolling out the NBN, would not be able to meet the average revenue per user forecast for 2012-22.
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NBN speeds still missing the mark: ACCC
- 10:01AM February 6, 2019
NBN speeds during peak hours are still failing to hit the mark, according to the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, as telcos move their customers to new NBN wholesale prices.
According to the regulator’s latest Measuring Broadband Australia report, while the overall level of service on the NBN has improved, some customers were still experiencing slower speeds, with TPG Telecom and iiNet posting a decline in speed performance compared to the previous quarter.
“Download speeds during the busiest hour – when RSP networks were under the most stress during the 30-day testing period – were significantly lower than at other busy times,” the ACCC said.
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National Broadband Network needs to take $20bn writedown, says JP Morgan
- 1:09PM February 6, 2019
The value of the National Broadband Network needs to be written down by at least $20 billion to make the wholesale costs low enough for telcos to keep their heads above water and offer customers cheaper high-speed internet, according to JP Morgan.
According to JP Morgan analyst Eric Pan, writing down the $51bn project by at least 40 to 50 per cent is the only way to bring down broadband prices for consumers and make the NBN a viable target for potential private investors.
“It’s worth noting that a 40 per cent write down would merely bring it back in line with the original $30bn budget for the NBN, before the cost over runs came in,” he said in client note.
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Firefox set to silence auto-play audio with March upgrade
Version 66 of the browser will block audio and video by default, though user interactions can override the setting.
Credit: IDG
Mozilla this week announced that the next upgrade to Firefox, due for release March 19, will automatically block all auto-play audio by default.
"Starting with the release of Firefox 66 for desktop and Firefox for Android, Firefox will block audible audio and video by default," Chris Pearce, a Mozilla software engineer, wrote in a post to the company's Hacks blog.
Only when the user explicitly interacts with the website to launch audio or video content - Pearce cited clicking a "Play" button as an example - will Firefox allow sound to stream.
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Enjoy!
David.
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