Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Tuesday, January 15, 2019

Commentators and Journalists Weigh In On The MyHR Debate And Related Matters. Lots Of Interesting Perspectives - Week 26.

Note: I have excluded (or marked out) any commentary taking significant  funding from the Agency or the Department of Health on all this to avoid what amounts to paid propaganda. (e.g. CHF, RACGP, AMA, National Rural Health Alliance etc. where they were simply putting the ADHA line – viz. that the myHR is a wonderfully useful clinical development that will save huge numbers of lives at no risk to anyone – which is plainly untrue) (This signifies probable ADHA Propaganda)
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Note: This week has just covered all the privacy compromising announcements in a week – along with the myHR. It never seems to stop!
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I’ll be evil and I’ll get rich. You can have a share.

By John Schwartz
12 January 2019 — 11:08am
Let's make the future great again.
Do you remember when the future was great? I do. Technology was going to fix our problems, changing the way we all live, work and play.
That kind of utopian patter was big at the beginning of my career, when the hot new app was … fire.
Over time, technologies changed but the overblown promises stayed. The internet was going to give us access to the best of the world's information. Music services like Napster would be an infinite jukebox, and all free! Social media would connect us with our friends and families (and their pets and holiday snapshots), and usher in new waves of democracy around the world!
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Data breaches raise new concerns about Australia’s e-health record

January 10, 2019
There have been calls for another stay on the roll out of Australia’s troubled My Health Record digital patient data scheme after figures revealed an increase in the number of data breaches.
The Sydney Morning Herald reported that the system sustained 42 data breaches last financial year, just as the country’s government struggled to convince people not to opt-out of the system.
My Health Record has been roundly criticised as it is based around an “opt-out” principle, and as the project developed there were serious concerns about what the information could be used for and who could see it.
There were worries that other government departments may be able to access the records – although researchers and public health officials can only access de-identified data from the system.
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My Health Record system data breaches rise

Hafizah Osman | 10 Jan 201
The number of data breaches involving My Health Record has risen year-on-year, from 35 incidents in the last financial year to 42 incidents this year, a report by the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) has shown. 
The agency’s Annual Report 2017–18 identified that “42 data breaches (in 28 notifications) were reported to the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC)… concerning potential data security or integrity breaches”, but with “no purposeful or malicious attacks compromising the integrity or security of the My Health Record system”. 
Of the 42 instances, one breach resulted from unauthorised access to a My Health Record as a result of an incorrect parental authorised representative being assigned to a child. 
Two breaches resulted from suspected fraud against the Medicare program, where the incorrect records appeared in the My Health Record of the affected individual and were viewed without authority by the individual undertaking the suspected fraudulent activity.
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My Health Record data breached 77 times in 24 months

Australia’s controversial My Health Record program has once again come under scrutiny after it has been revealed data breaches of the system have more than doubled in the last 12 months.
Over a 24 month period, My Health Record documents have revealed 77 data breaches reported to the Australian Information Commissioner, including 42 breaches recorded since Australians began being automatically enrolled into the system last year.
DATA BREACHES
A new report released by the Australian Digital Health Agency has revealed there has been 42 data breaches since Australians began to be enrolled on the new My Health Record system in July.
According to reports, records show data was breached by authorities for a number of reasons, including after a child was mistakenly given parental authorisation to view a record, 24 for suspected cases of Medicare fraud, and 17 due to “intertwined Medicare records”.
The numbers show an increase from the 2016-2017 report, where My Health Record authorities reported 35 data breaches, all of a similar nature to this year’s breaches.
This takes the total number to 77 data breaches in 24 months.
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There’s a cost to not innovating and the public sector risks paying full price

09 Jan 19
Article by Rimini Street general manager APAC, Andrew Powell.
The public sector, by necessity, has always been constrained when it comes to spending on innovation. Budgets are often tighter and even if they’re not, the public purse is under constant scrutiny from taxpayers and citizens.
Regardless, most organisations are moving towards some form of digitisation, and government agencies need to keep pace with the rate of innovation for the sake of taxpayers – and there is a significant downside risk to not innovating.
Rimini Street recently commissioned research from Vanson Bourne into “The State of IT Innovation” which surveyed decision makers across the globe, including in Australia and New Zealand and across both the private and public sector. It found that, on average, all respondents wanted to increase their innovation spend by 15.89 per cent but their organisations planned an increase of 10.94 per cent.
But diving deeper into the findings, public sector respondents wanted an increase of 14.38 per cent, yet their organisations planned to increase it by just 8.52 per cent.
Further, the Vanson Bourne research found that organisations – both public and private – in the A/NZ region plan to spend the second-least amount on IT innovation in the next 12 months, beating only Israel in surveyed regions across the globe. Further, A/NZ organisations plan to increase their IT innovation spend by just 6.31 per cent in the 12 months following the survey, well below the global average of 10.94 per cent.
There may be reasons for public sector agencies in particular to be somewhat reluctant with IT innovation spend, such as recent headline-grabbing IT issues: for instance, My Health Record has come under fire from a sceptical public due to concerns around privacy and data security.
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January 9 2019 - 4:00AM

Seniors Week events at Lake Cathie and Port Macquarie

Local News ADHA Propaganda
Attendees at the 2018 Seniors Expo Event at Panthers in Port Macquarie.
The community is invited to a celebratory event as part of Seniors Week on Monday, February 18. 
There will be a Love Your Life morning tea at Lake Cathie Bowling Club, hosted by the North Coast Primary Network’s Healthy Towns team. 
Love your Life is the theme for the 2019 Seniors Week to celebrate the many positives of growing older. 
The morning tea is from 9.30am until 10.30am at the Lake Cathie Bowling Club. The event will include a number of presentations about the online medical record, My Health Record and about the role of a GP in managing health. Attendees will be given a show bag. 
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Better access to health data could save $3bn and improve Australians’ health

Hafizah Osman | 08 Jan 2019
A national study into the risks of CT scans in children that was delayed by three years waiting for Commonwealth approval to access data has supported findings that Australian health and medical researchers face a myriad of problems around data accessibility for research. 
Another example, a University of Melbourne researcher who spent $60,000 of her research budget to access 6000 Victorian births, deaths and marriages certificates, also supported the claims of the Flying Blind 2: Volume 2 – Australian Researchers and Digital Health report. 
The study found that better access for researchers to health data could save the country $3 billion and improve the health of all Australians over the next 15 years. 
Flying Blind is a collaboration between the newly established Digital Health Cooperative Research Centre (CRC), the Capital Markets CRC and Research Australia.
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Computers can see genetic disorders in your face

  • By The Times
  • The Times
  • 3:05PM January 8, 2019
Scientists have developed an artificial-intelligence system that can identify rare genetic conditions from a photograph of a patient’s face.
The DeepGestalt system offers new hope for parents of children who suffer developmental delays because of genetic variations.
“We hope to shorten the length of the diagnostic odyssey these families often go through,” said Karen Gripp, co-author of a paper published in the journal Nature Medicine.
However, there are fears that the technology could be abused.
Peter Bannister, of the Institution of Engineering and Technology, said: “If your insurance company can tell from a passport photo that you have a genetic disorder, could they discriminate against you?”
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'Unintended redirection' renders Australian government sites unusable

Embarrassing errors blamed on hosting service run by Department of Finance
The websites of a string of government agencies experienced embarrassing errors on Monday afternoon, which caused domain names to erroneously display the home pages of separate departments.
The errors, which rendered home pages all but unusable, appeared to begin early Monday afternoon. Domain names erroneously cycled through a range of webpages from separate agencies or departments.
The domain name for the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) website, for example, wrongly cycled between the home pages of My Health Record, IP Australia, the Civil Aviation Safety Authority, the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission, and the Australian Building and Construction Commission.
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Increasing patient involvement: 4 rules of engagement

InterSystems Corporation (Australia)

By Dr Yossi Cohen*
Tuesday, 08 January, 2019
Allowing patients to be more engaged with their care can help people be healthier and deliver better health outcomes. Technology is seen as a key enabler.
However, technology-enabled patient engagement is evolving. Globally, most countries exhibit a relatively low level of maturity for common patient engagement online functions, such as patient access to medical records, appointment booking, or communication with clinicians through secure messaging.
This is certainly the case in Australia, where efforts to engage the general population in electronic health care are often overshadowed by privacy and security concerns.
A recent survey of general medical practices in Victoria, published by Urooj Raza Khan et al from Charles Sturt University, found that while 76% of 51 healthcare providers had interacted with the Australian national My Health Record, only 29% of 179 patients had done the same.
While 66% of respondents believed MyHR contributed to making patient care easier and faster, only 49% believed it helped make patient care safer. Some 57% thought MyHR adoption should be encouraged through things like more user education and training, marketing and promotion, and usability improvements.
As we look to MyHR and other technology initiatives to further engage patients in their own care, the following considerations, based on the experience of the UK National Health Scheme (NHS), should be borne in mind.
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Facebook's biggest bear says problems 'likely to worsen' in 2019

By Ryan Vlastelica
Updated 08 Jan 2019 — 9:20 AM, first published at 9:12 AM
New York | Facebook is likely to see another rough year in 2019 as "many of the company's managerial choices in its early years continue to play out negatively", according to Pivotal Research Group, which slashed its price target on the stock.
The target was lowered to $US113 from $US125, which represents downside potential of about 18 per cent from the company's Monday close of $US138.05. The new target is also the lowest on the Street.
Analyst Brian Wieser affirmed his sell rating, saying the social media company's problems "seem likely to worsen from here (which is saying something considering the year it had in 2018)".
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Dozens of Breaches of the My Health Record Database Have Already Been Recorded

By Zeb Holmes and Ugur Nedim
The number of breaches detected and recorded against the My Health Record database rose from 35 to 42 in the past financial year, raising concerns about who the information may be sold or provided to, and how it may be misused.
The breaches fly in the face of consistent claims by the federal government that the database is safe and secure, and that the privacy of those who choose not to opt out is protected.
The scheme
My Health Record is an online summary of your key health information, which is accessible to authorised persons from anywhere.
Every Australian will eventually receive a My Health Record unless they opt out of the scheme.
Initially, Australians were given only three months to opt out, but the deadline has been extended twice due to various issues with the system. The latest opt out deadline is 31 January 2019.
Currently, six million Australians are registered on the My Health Record database. That number is expected to increase to about 23 million when the opt-out period ends.
By the end of October 2018, 1.1 million Australians had opted out of the scheme.
Government agency claims breaches are not malicious
The Australian Digital Health Agency annual report claims there have been “no purposeful or malicious attacks compromising the integrity or security of the My Health Record system”.
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Telecoms privacy and data security provisions in Australia

Privacy and data security
Net neutrality
What is your jurisdiction’s regulatory stance on net neutrality?
In Australia, there is no mandated net neutrality rule. As a result, the only protections of an equal playing field over the Internet are contained within general laws regarding anti-competitive conduct. The introduction of net neutrality laws was a recommendation of the former Labour government in its Convergence Review, but it is not currently being pursued by the coalition (conservative) government that took office in 2013. Importantly, though, the Australian domestic telecommunications market differs to the US and European markets in a number of respects that impacts on this issue. For example, in Australia there is significantly less vertical integration than in the United States. Further, Australian internet plans are priced principally by reference to the amount of data downloaded (‘user pays’ model), as well as speed. Additionally, as the Australian network is open to use by competitors, customers are able to choose from a wide range of broadband providers (and indeed different technology mixes) and can easily switch between providers and plans.
Encryption
Are there regulations or restrictions on encryption of communications?
Generally, encryption can be used freely within Australia. The Cybercrime Act 2001 provides some provision for law enforcement agencies to compel disclosure of encrypted data. The restrictions on encryption of communications are largely contained in the Customs (Prohibited Exports) Regulations Schedule 13E and Section 112 of the Customs Act 1901. Crypto-software is included on the Defence and Strategic Goods List (DSGL) and the Australian Defence Trade Controls Act 2012 (DTCA) prohibits the ‘supply’ of DSGL technology outside of Australia without a permit. There are exceptions detailed in the DSGL Cryptography Note that include, for example, material in the public domain and software/hardware where the cryptographic function cannot be easily changed. Further exceptions exist for technology that is considered ‘basic scientific research’, software which is for personal use and for specific financial products/applications.
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Emergency text and email service hacked, residents receive warning messages about their personal data

7 January, 2019
A hacker has been able to send messages via text, email, and landline to tens of thousands of people across Australia after an emergency warning alert service, used by councils, was hacked.

Key points:

  • The company says a 'small proportion' of its database received a message from the hacker
  • People who received the message are urged to delete it and not reply
  • Police are investigating the breach
The message sent from the Early Warning Network on Friday night warned "EWN has been hacked. Your personal data is not safe. Trying to fix the security issues".
It then included a link to a support email address and a website.
EWN said a hacker accessed its alerting system and sent the message to part of its database.
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German cyber agency defends handling of data breach

By Paul Carrel and Holger Hansen
Updated 06 Jan 2019 — 3:00 PM, first published at 12:08 PM
Berlin |Germany's BSI cyber defence agency at the weekend defended its role in responding to a far-reaching data breach, saying it could not have connected individual cases it was aware of last year until the entire data release became public.
The government said on late on Friday (AEDT) that personal data and documents from hundreds of German politicians and public figures including Chancellor Angela Merkel had been published online, in what appeared to be one of Germany's biggest data breaches.
The incident has shocked the establishment and prompted calls for security agencies to clarify whether any security deficiencies they were aware of had been exploited, and if they could have acted sooner to head off the breach.
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Comments welcome!
David.

Monday, January 14, 2019

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 14th January, 2019.

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

Again we are still in the ‘silly season’ but there is a little news around.
Note we are getting close to the end of the Opt-Out Period so warn all those who may want to be free of this soon!
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SafeScript issues alerts for 3300 patients in two months

Victoria prepares to roll out the real-time script-tracking software statewide in April
7th January 2019
Warnings about almost 3300 patients were sent to doctors and pharmacists during the first two-month trial of Victoria’s real-time script-tracking software, the state government says.
The software, called SafeScript, was rolled out in more than 400 GP clinics and pharmacies in October to combat prescription drug misuse.
When users prescribe or dispense a monitored medicine, including all schedule 8 drugs and some schedule 4 drugs, the system alerts them if the patient has previously been prescribed a monitored drug from a different doctor.
They can then check a full list of monitored medicines prescribed to the patient.
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Minister for Health and Minister for Ambulance Services
The Honourable Steven Miles

Friday, January 11, 2019

A new device for Queenslanders in a medical emergency

A new device will give paramedics greater access to a patient’s vital medical information in an emergency.
Minister for Ambulance Services Steven Miles said the SafeMate program, launched today by Queensland Ambulance Service (QAS), SafeMate and Medibank, is a new digital system housing a patient’s medical and personal information that they themselves have entered online.
“This is crucial information that a patient wants the paramedic to know in a medical emergency,” Minister Miles said.
“Paramedics will use their operational iPads to tap the patient’s SafeMate card or device, and the medical information will appear on the screen.
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The simple fax: This 'dinosaur' of tech isn't dead yet

By Emma Koehn
7 January 2019 — 12:01am
If you're in the market for a tech bargain, chances are you'll find some great deals on fax machines.
It might seem strange that the bulky units are still available or that makers of fancier "multi-function" photocopiers would bother spruiking their fax credentials.
But for a cohort of small businesses across Australia, firing up the fascimile is still part of the daily routine.
"You used to always hear the [fax] calls coming through, and all the funny noises with it," says head of Melbourne business TIS Financial, Rocky Tempone.
"But there are still clients with fax machines these days and they still rely on them to reach our office."
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Lifeline for people with rare diseases in health system maze

By Kate Aubusson
12 January 2019 — 12:00am
A new trial aims to help people with rare and debilitating diseases access support, treatments and clinical trials amid a malaise of confusion, red-tape and dead ends.
A three-year pilot trial funded by the federal government will station 10 telehealth nurses at 10 charities that support people with rare and complex conditions to connect them with the best-suited services and information for them.
After the initial shock of a diagnosis, these patients and their families can feel overwhelming disorientation as they attempt to navigate a nebulous health system better equipped for more common ailments.
The trial aims to ensure people who are in need of support get fast, expert advice tailored to their particular circumstances in a coordinated way, Health Minister Greg Hunt said. Be it specialist care, home services, mental health support, emerging technology or opportunities to participate in clinical trials for potential new treatments.
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NDIS IT systems need to be ‘significantly improved’: Inquiry

Parliamentary inquiry into NDIS ICT systems calls for swift action
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld) 10 January, 2019 12:53
A parliamentary inquiry says during its deliberations it received evidence that key ICT systems of the National Disability Insurance Agency (NDIA) still need to be “significantly improved”.
The Joint Standing Committee on the National Disability Insurance Scheme in December completed its report into the ICT systems supporting the NDIS. 
The committee found that the NDIA is “under enormous pressure to meet its participant intake targets”. As of the end of September, more than 208,000 participants were receiving support through the NDIS — by 2020, some 460,000 participants are expected to be covered by the scheme.
During a trial period from 2013 to mid-2016, the NDIS was delivered using a Siebel system managed by the Department of Social Services. The government in 2015-16 earmarked $143 million over a four-year period for a permanent ICT system to underpin the scheme, with the Department of Human Services tasked with overseeing its implementation.
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11 Jan 2019 12:24 PM AEST                            

Renewed backing for digital health commercialisation initiative

A novel program to drive commercialisation skills in the burgeoning digital health sector has received new funding from the Medical Technologies and Pharmaceuticals Growth Centre, MTPConnect.
ANDHealth, Australia’s digital health business accelerator, has been awarded $250,000 to deliver intensive Digital Health Market Success Bootcamps for up to 40 Australian digital health companies.
MTPConnect CEO Dr Dan Grant says ANDHealth’s focus is on equipping digital health innovators with the skills needed to turn ideas into commercially successful products.
“Through ANDHealth’s intensive, five-day focused curriculum, representatives from digital health companies will take a deep dive into clinical evidence, regulation, business models, intellectual property, partnering, attracting investment and exploring new international markets,” he says.
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Tech development, regulation, investment and implementation key to digital health

Hafizah Osman | 07 Jan 2019
Australia’s healthcare industry and government stakeholders need to focus on four key areas – technology development, regulation, investment and implementation – to stimulate a thriving digital health industry. 
 A report released by digital business health accelerator ANDHealth, Digital Health: Creating a New Growth Industry for Australia, outlined these as next steps needed to create a cohesive and collaborative digital health industry.
ANDHealth CEO Bronwyn Le Grice said that with the global digital health market expected to reach US$206 billion by 2020, driven by the mobile and wireless health market, Australia needs to pursue innovation in technology, such as AI, immersive simulation, big data and IoT.
And in order to fully realise the industry’s full potential, there needs to be in place an integrated ecosystem that supports the growth and establishment of the industry.
Here is the full paper to download:
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Position vacant: human

  • 12:00AM January 8, 2019
The literature on the future of work can be gloomy, if not dystopian. The genre works on fear plus just enough hope that if we are somehow smart enough we will be among the minority able to hold on to jobs in the decades ahead.
Richard Baldwin’s new book, The Globotics Upheaval: Globalisation, Robotics and the Future of Work (Hachette), published today, doesn’t avoid the tough calls about the impact on our economies of offshore workers and automation.
But the American-born Swiss academic is more optimistic than many commentators. Indeed he suggests life could actually be better in the future — as long as we understand that the edge we have over the machines is our humanity. On the phone from Geneva where he is professor of international economics at the Graduate Institute, Baldwin suggests we need to spend less time worrying about what artificial intelligence and remote workers overseas workers can do more cheaply than us and focus on where we have the upper hand.
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Hacking for data sharing

ACS to hold Directed Hack series next month.

By Staff Writers on Jan 08 2019 09:00 AM
Late last year, the Federal government announced its plans to take all government services online by 2025.
The digital transformation will see end-to-end services underpinned by a myGovID that will merge all existing government logins, giving you the ability to do everything online.
But with the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) recently revealing the My Health Record system fell victim to 42 data breaches in the 2017/18 financial year, it is clear that data sharing is still a work in progress.
Data sharing today for government and industry is now simultaneously both an exciting opportunity and a gigantic risk.
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Cancer Trials Australia joins data-sharing platform

09 Jan 2019 — 12:01 AM
You may have considered donating blood, but what about your private information?
Australians will be able to donate their health and social-media data to medical research via a platform created by Silicon Valley data-management company ShareRoot.
People suffering cancer, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, stroke and mental health issues will be invited to join the online platform, called MediaConsent, and donate data from their social media accounts, digital health wearables such as Fitbits, and medical records, with the aim of helping research.
"I would love the idea of people being able to donate their data to medical research. I think that would just be brilliant," said Michelle Gallaher, who spearheads the MediaConsent project at ShareRoot.
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Indigenous health TV series gets $1m boost

A cultural camping program that aims to improve the health of indigenous men in remote Australia has received a $1 million federal government funding boost.
Rebecca Gredley
Australian Associated Press January 8, 20193:07pm
A television series aimed at improving the health of indigenous men in remote Australia has received a $1 million boost from the federal government.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture and traditional knowledge is central to the Camping on Country program, which focuses on alcohol and drug dependency, smoking, diet, exercise and mental health.
The current life expectancy for an Australian indigenous man is 70, which is 10 years less than non-indigenous males.
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Revised govt-wide digital records play gets green light

By Justin Hendry on Jan 10, 2019 12:49PM

Finance to begin co-design next month.

A revised federal government plan to source multiple digital records management solutions instead of a single government-wide platform has been endorsed by industry and government representatives.
After receiving feedback on its sourcing strategy discussion paper for digital records transformation, the Department of Finance will begin a co-design process to figure out the most appropriate way to buy modernised digital records technologies.
The department had originally hoped to shift the Australian Public Service (APS) to a single cloud-based government-wide digital records platform.
But it was forced rethink this approach after being unable to find a single off-the-shelf solution that addressed all its needs.
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Government-funded body's survey of cyber sector reveals encryption bill dread

AustCyber #aabill survey, completed in November but not released until after bill passed, finds majority fear negative impact
George Nott (Computerworld) 10 January, 2019 15:41
A government-funded body's survey of Australian cyber security companies, which was conducted before the controversial encryption bill was passed but not released until late last month, reveals most firms fear the legislation will have a profoundly negative impact on their businesses.
The concern is most keenly felt by those companies that export overseas, which believe the Telecommunications and Other Legislation Amendment (Assistance and Access) Bill 2018 – passed into law amid farcical scenes during the final day of parliament for 2018 – will result in the perception that their products are less secure.
According to the AustCyber (Australian Cyber Security Growth Network) survey, carried out by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), close to three-quarters of surveyed companies think the bill will damage the reputation of their products, while a similar number are worried about potential conflicts between the bill and laws in other countries in which they operate.
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Voice-activated gadgets will dominate CES. Will they sell?

By Matt Day
Updated 06 Jan 2019 — 3:34 PM, first published at 3:21 PM
As he browsed digital store shelves last month in search of an aromatherapy diffuser, entrepreneur David Berger had a single requirement for his wife's Christmas gift: It had to work with Amazon's Alexa software.
"She's really into making the house smell beautiful, and I'm really into Alexa," says Berger who lives in Weston, Connecticut. "So this is a great gift for both of us."
Voice-activated digital assistants are racing from novelty to mainstream computing device. More than a quarter of US adults will use one regularly next year, according to EMarketer, and they're increasingly ordering them to dim the lights, control the television and thermostat and, yes, turn on diffusers to waft scents around the house.
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Buying medicines online can risk your health and your hip pocket

08 Jan 2019 9:00 AM 
When buying medicines online remember, if it looks too good to be true, it probably is.

With the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) continuing to issue
alerts about medicines available on the internet, NPS MedicineWise recommends checking up on the online provider to prevent risking your health, wallet and even prosecution.

NPS MedicineWise CEO Mr Steve Morris says it may be tempting to self-diagnose and order medicines online, but this can be a dangerous practice.

“The risk with buying medicines online is your self-diagnosis may be wrong, the medicine you purchase may not be suitable for you, and it might interact with other medicines you may already be taking,” said Mr Morris.
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Telstra set to start offering 5G smartphones in the first half of 2019

By Adam Turner
10 January 2019 — 4:01pm
Telstra mobile customers will soon have access to 5G data speeds as the telco announced plans to offer several compatible smartphones by mid-year.
Speaking at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Telstra chief executive Andy Penn confirmed the company has struck exclusive Australian deals with some of the world’s largest smartphone makers to offer their 5G handsets in the first half of 2019.
"After a number of discussions, including here at CES, we have entered into a number of partnerships with some of the world's leading brands to bring their first 5G devices exclusively to Telstra customers on the Telstra network," Mr Penn says.
Mr Penn declined to confirm which vendors are on board, although the list almost certainly does not include Apple considering that — even if the next iPhone does support 5G — it is unlikely to be available until the second half of the year.
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Hubble shows Triangulum galaxy where stars are forming

  • By Press Association
  • AAP
  • 3:17PM January 8, 2019
The most detailed image yet of a 40-billion-star neighbouring galaxy has been captured by the Hubble Space Telescope.
The Triangulum Galaxy, located three million light years away from the Milky Way, is one of the most distant objects visible to the naked eye.
Under dark-sky conditions, it appears as a faint, blurry object in the constellation of Triangulum (the Triangle) and is a target for amateur astronomers.
But in a new 665-million-pixel image taken by the NASA/European Space Agency (ESA) Hubble Space Telescope, the spiral galaxy’s billions of stars are brightly showcased.
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Enjoy!
David.