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."

Thursday, July 27, 2017

I Wonder Where This Mechanism Fits Into The Framework Of Clinical Data Sharing?

This appeared last week:

More clinicians are texting, but far fewer hospitals offer a secure messaging app



Although most clinicians still use pagers, text messaging is gaining traction despite security concerns.
As more clinicians gravitate toward text messaging to communicate patient information, hospitals aren’t keeping pace with appropriate security protocols.
Pagers continue to be the most popular form of communication among hospital-based clinicians, but more than half are using standard text messaging for patient care-related communication, according to a survey published in the Journal of Hospital Medicine.
However, just 27% of respondents said their organization had implemented a secure messaging application that some clinicians were using. Just 7% said most clinicians were using a hospital-issued messaging app.
Physicians have previously underscored the “unprecedented convenience” of text messaging while acknowledging the myriad privacy concerns that go along with transmitting unencrypted information. Researchers have also raised patient safety concerns associated with secure messaging apps that run into connectivity delays and network latency.
More here:
With the ubiquity of both smart phones and secure messaging apps it seems only sensible to explore where such apps might fit and how they might interact with other messaging and information sources.
Maybe the ADHA could ask the SMD taskforce once they have decided on a more stationary system based strategy that is hopefully not too .pdf rich.
David.

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Really Some People Should Not Go Public On Topics Where Their Technical Insight Is Not Really Up to Speed.

This appeared last week

Safeguarding Patient Confidentiality in Accessing Electronic Health Records

Guest: Kylie Ward
Presenter: Henry Acosta
Guest Bio: Adjunct Professor Kylie Ward has had a successful and celebrated career as a Nursing Leader and Health and Aged Care Executive in Australia for over 20 years. She has held positions of Managing Director, Director of Clinical Operations, Director of Nursing and Midwifery, Director of the Division of Medicine, Associate Director of Women’s and Children’s Health and Executive Director of Nursing and Midwifery in three major health services in NSW and Victoria. She has been a NUM, After Hours Coordinator, Campus Manager, Bed Manager and Patient Flow Manager. Her clinical background is in intensive care and aged care.
Kylie has enjoyed a long history with ACN and the organisations that ACN is founded upon, RCNA and the College of Nursing. After years of membership and involvement in both organisations including RCNA Chapter Chair of Sydney West Kylie was awarded Fellowship of both organisations in 2007. In 2009 Kylie was awarded a Wharton Fellowship from the University of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Understanding the history and commitment of these two great organisations to nursing professionalism in Australia Kylie is committed to honouring the past to lead the Australian College of Nursing as a dynamic and influential key professional organisational well into the future.
Segment overview: In today’s Health Supplier Segment, we are joined by returning guest Adjunct Professor Kylie Ward from the Australian College of Nursing here to discuss the topic of Electronic Health Records of Patients and their safety. According to Kylie, a national shared electronic health record means that as people move between health care providers, or even move between states, clinical professionals have a single trusted source of information. This information that could be vital such as a person’s allergies or medications, they can quickly and easily access. She also said that the ACN supports moves towards a national op-out approach to My Health Record and wants to ensure the vast majority of Australians take up this opportunity to improve their health care. Kylie mentioned that security concerns could play a factor in people choosing to wait to participate. She believes that nurses must be involved in the development, implementation and ongoing maintenance of My Health Record.
There is 10 minutes of audio here where you will hear just how deep a dive she has taken into the myHR, its safely and workings.
It really is sad we cannot have a better informed debate on the myHR in my view. Kylie is just emblematic – sadly – of the ‘some technology is good, so more must be better’ brigade.
There is nothing personal here – I am sure she is a lovely person as most nurses are – but I do which she would stick to the areas where she has expertise as she obviously has in nursing!
David.

I Wonder Why The National Digital Health Strategy Is So Secret. Might It Be It Is Not Very Good?

To me the most important part of the exceptionally partial Board Minutes that the ADHA released covering their June 14 Meeting was the last paragraph of the CEO’s report.

It read:

“National Digital Health Strategy


The Board approved submission of the Strategy in its extraordinary meeting in May. The Strategy – and the supporting Agency work plan – were submitted to the Australian Health Ministers’ Advisory Council for consideration at its meeting on 2 June. The outcome of that decision will be tabled for the Board’s information.

I would like to thank members of the Board who participated in the Strategy Review group for their help in its development.”

So what we learn from this is:

1. There was a Board Meeting in May which has not been disclosed to date.

2. There exists a very advanced National Digital Health Strategy which has been submitted for approval to COAG Health Ministers Advisors.

3. We have not been told (to date) what Health Minsters Advisors thought of the Strategy – suggesting they were less than happy. I assume happiness would have resulted in glad cries and a press release or maybe they have to wait for Ministerial views??

I assume to process would be a draft going to this committee below which reports to and advises the Health Ministers Council (http://www.coaghealthcouncil.gov.au/)

National Health Information and Performance Principal Committee (NHIPPC)
Role: To advise AHMAC on eHealth, information management and performance reporting development, governance and strategies, and to facilitate collaboration between the Commonwealth, states and territories and other key national stakeholders in relation to these areas.
Secretariat: NHIPPC.secretariat@dhhs.vic.gov.au
Contact Number: 03 9096 7301

See here:

http://www.coaghealthcouncil.gov.au/AHMAC/Principal-Committees

The full Council only seems to meet twice a year (next due October - November, 2017 at a guess).

All in all the whole process is 1. Too secret and 2. Too slow.

I wonder just how confident we can be we will get a plan that is actually implementable, suits all the stakeholders, has real evidence based benefits, is not just about the myHR and does not bankrupt us? It would also have been nice for the stakeholders to have seen  late draft - as many of us were promised.

David.

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

I Think The NBN Story Is Becoming So Worrying That The Blog Needs To Have More To Say On The Looming Disaster.

Let me first confess a personal interest. Presently I have Optus Cable with their fast option. I get 100mbs download and it is down about 2-3 hours every 2-3 months. So I am a happy camper and do not want to be pushed onto a rubbish slow NBN. (See panels at bottom of blog)
With all that said I see this:

The gap between NBN promise and reality

  • Jul 19 2017 at 5:36 PM
My internet speeds plummeted when I moved house recently. It didn't matter how expensive my broadband plan was, nor the fact I had only shifted a few blocks away.
Rather than being connected to the internet through the hybrid fibre coaxial cable, my new street was still back on the old copper telephone lines.
Adjustments to ADSL technology may have greatly improved speeds over copper lines but given the growing and massive demand for data, the result still seems like putting lipstick on an ageing pig.
Nor is it as if Telstra is too interested in investing much to upgrade either cable or copper given their previous network is being gradually subsumed into the government-owned monopoly of NBN Co, the owner of the national broadband network.
Yet even if my new address is within 20 minutes of the Sydney CBD and in one of Australia's most densely populated suburbs, the NBN is still MIA there. The NBN website tells me I will be waiting until the first half of 2019 before it arrives.
Patience, patience, patience.
But it's now obvious that the arrival of the NBN to millions more homes over the next couple of years is unlikely to mean the end of download and upload woes.
Even more importantly, it is only likely to accelerate the criticism of the Turnbull government's version of the NBN in the lead up to the next election.
It means more and more people will realise the long-promised nirvana of high-speed broadband via the NBN does not necessarily translate into reality.
There are plenty of technical and financial reasons for this but most consumers won't care. They will care they are not getting what they think they are paying for.
That will make them likely to blame the Turnbull government as well as the NBN and retailer service providers like Telstra and Optus.
So rather than the slow roll out of the NBN being a political problem, it will quickly become the reverse. The more households and small businesses are connected, the more complaints there will be.
As usual, it mostly comes down to cost. In this case, it's the requirement for NBN Co to continue the commercial fantasy it can provide a financial return on nearly $50 billion worth of taxpayer investment in the project.
This was an accounting trick first applied by the Rudd Labor government and continued by governments ever since. That's because the promise of a return on investment of a few per cent above the government bond rate means the tens of billions of NBN dollars don't get counted as part of the budget deficit.
Yet the economic forecasts of the NBN always relied on political hype over commercial rationality. As communications spokesman and then minister Malcolm Turnbull promised "cheaper, faster, sooner" broadband via a revised hybrid technology NBN.
Lots more here:
Sounds just awful – and the more I read the worse my fear becomes!
There are two possible fixes it seems to me. First technology may save me – as per this.

Fifield predicts 5G revolution for Australia, ignores NBN

Communications Minister Mitch Fifield clearly believes in the slogan that a former Labor prime minister, Julia Gillard, used in her last election campaign: moving forward.
Fifield has moved on to the next phase of his life: yesterday he gave a 2368-word speech at a telecommunications conference in Sydney and did not mention the word NBN even once.
He waxed lyrical about 5G, the proposed next telecommunications standard. You can see the entire speech here.
Fifield said: "I believe that the imminent arrival of 5G mobile technology will be a truly revolutionary event in the telecommunications industry. In fact, the arrival of 5G may well be an inflection point not just for the telecoms sector, but for the entire Australian economy."

One would think that the national broadband network, the project that's often called the biggest such endeavour in the country's history — NBN chief executive Bill Morrow sometimes calls it one of the biggest and most difficult in the world — would have figured even momentarily.
Lots more here:
The other hope my be the ACCC. See this for example

ACCC cracks down on 'misleading' NBN speed claims

Lucy Battersby
Published: July 20 2017 - 6:09PM
Telecommunications companies are misleading customers over broadband internet speeds and the worst offenders will likely face prosecution over dodgy advertising by the end of the year, the consumer watchdog says.
Chairman Rod Sims said the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) would conduct "compliance sweeps" of broadband marketing and telco websites later this year in a bid to keep telcos honest about speeds available on the national broadband network.  
"Right now, consumers are not getting the basic information they need to make an informed choice. Indeed, they are often being misled," Mr Sims said on Thursday.
"We want to see consumers presented with information based on the realistic speeds they can expect to experience, particularly during busy periods. Not just best-case scenarios."
Broadband was an ACCC compliance and enforcement priority this year, he told a telco industry conference.
"We are investigating and expect to be taking action in respect of misleading conduct around broadband speeds," he said.
As more Australians migrate to the government-owned NBN, tensions are building between consumers and telcos over download speeds, particularly during peak evening periods.
Lots more here:
Let me know but I feel this is an issue we all need to be on top of.
Do please comment and let me know about your experience with the NBN.
David.

Monday, July 24, 2017

It Seems Poking The Dragon Worked - Suddenly New Board Minutes Appear!

Look what we now see!

-----

Board Papers

The intent of the Board is to publish as many Board documents as is feasible. Information and attachments to Board documents that are draft, not finalised or sensitive will not be published. An exception is made for draft material already in the public domain (in this instance the Board Advisory Committee Charters released on 16 September 2016).

Board Meeting 14 June 2017 - Board Papers (Download)


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A win for the good guys - but even this is far too late and totally incomplete!

David

Weekly Australian Health IT Links – 24th July, 2017.

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

The biggest news this week is how the public perception of the NBN is unravelling and how public frustration is beginning to build.
Elsewhere we have the ADHA seeming to struggle with Strategy and solutions for some ongoing problems right now. Would be good to see some real progress.
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Can this man turn around one of Australia's costliest policy disasters?

20 July 2017

NEWS REVIEW

Can Tim Kelsey resuscitate the moribund My Health Record system?
Time Kelsey doesn’t smile much when you meet him. But then his job probably means he doesn’t have much to smile about. 
He is the man tasked with rescuing Australia from one of the most expensive policy disasters in the nation’s history — the My Health Record system.
Ten months ago, the Federal Government hired Mr Kelsey, a former journalist and one-time Telstra Health bigwig, to head up the newly created Australian Digital Health Agency.
No faceless bureaucrat, the animated and garrulous Brit immediately attracted plenty of media attention.
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Plan to give patients more power over referrals

Rachel Worsley | 20 July, 2017 |  
Patients will be encouraged to shop around for a different specialist to the one named in their GP referral, under a push to boost healthcare competition.
The idea — strongly condemned by the RACGP — is one of several presented in a draft Productivity Commission report exploring ways inject greater user choice by weakening existing referral networks.
The report says patients should be given greater scope to “independently choose” a public outpatient clinic or private specialist “after leaving the GP’s office”.
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Why Telstra proved no smooth operator in cancer register bungles

19 July 2017

ANALYSIS 

Last year, when the Turnbull Government awarded an $180 million contract to Telstra to set up and run a new National Cancer Screening Register, many people were surprised and a little sceptical.
There was a political stink, with the Labor Party claiming that the clinical information of 11 million women should not be handed to a for-profit corporate giant, allegedly with a track record of security blunders.
The task set for Telstra Health involved combining the state-level Pap smear registers into one national register. This system would then underpin the important shift to five-yearly HPV tests instead of two-yearly Pap smears.
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17 July 2017

How virtual reality may reshape healthcare – or not

A man walks into a virtual bar … but this is no joke, instead it just may be the future of mental-health treatment.
Just say you’re a patient with severe paranoia and persecutory beliefs. Being stuck in a bar with dozens of other people would be a highly stressful situation, where thoughts such as “People are talking about me”, “People can read my mind” or “Someone wants to kill me” come unbidden.
Of course, a natural reaction would be to put your head down and avoid eye contact, and to get out of there as soon as possible. Unfortunately, these safety-seeking behaviours help to support that original delusion – that people really were out to get you and the only reason they didn’t was because of the steps you took to prevent it.
This is where virtual reality (VR) steps in.
A key goal of treatment is to get patients with persecutory beliefs to experience these situations without taking those avoidant measures, so that they can see that their fears are unfounded. Unfortunately,  such exposure in real-life may be too overwhelming and stressful for some, or impractical if the feared situation is difficult to access.
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Should we care that Medicare numbers are being sold on the ‘dark web’?

17 July 2017

TECH TALK

Forget about the ‘dark web’, it’s all about money, writes Antony Scholefield.
Recent revelations that Medicare numbers have been up for sale on the ‘dark web’ has thrown up a lot of questions.
It was not just “What the heck is the dark web?”, but also the deeper question of “Should we really care?”.
The first answer is that the dark web is a group of internet sites only accessible with special software, where people can more easily cover their tracks.
A journalist at the Guardian went to one website that promised to deliver the Medicare number of any individual, provided you gave them the name and the date of birth.
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Medicare details available on dark web is just tip of data breach iceberg

Chris Berg
Published: July 18 2017 - 12:00AM
Modern governments use a lot of data. A lot.
Our social services are organised by massive databases. Health, welfare, education and the pension all require reams of information about identity, social needs, eligibility, and entitlement.
Our infrastructure is managed by massive databases holding information about traffic flows, public transport usage, communications networks, and population flows.
Our security is maintained by complex information systems managing defence assets, intelligence data, and capabilities and deployment information.
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US law enforcement takes down site hosting Medicare data sale

AlphaBay, Hansa darknet marketplaces shut down
Rohan Pearce (Computerworld)
The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the US Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), the Dutch National Police, and Europol have cracked down on darknet markets, shutting down two of the major Tor-concealed marketplaces for illegal goods and services: Hansa and AlphaBay.
The US Department of Justice overnight announced that it had seized AlphaBay, the darknet market site that hosted the so-called ‘Medicare Machine’ service.
AlphaBay has been offline since 5 July.
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MedsASSIST use hasn’t dropped

Most pharmacies are still using MedsASSIST, an AJP poll has found

As the deadline for the upscheduling of codeine-containing OTCs grows closer, AJP readers had warned that pharmacies might drop the decision-making tool.
Readers suggested that following the TGA’s decision to upschedule the medicines, as few as 40% of pharmacies were using MedsASSIST.
But our latest poll further supports data which consistently show that use of the tool has only slightly declined since it was announced that codeine would become prescription-only.
Seventy-four per cent of respondents to the latest poll said they were continuing to use MedsASSIST, and planned to do so right up until 1 February 2018.
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Nearly 20,000 Australians caught up in massive Bupa Global data breach

Tony Yoo
Published: July 17 2017 - 11:23AM
Bupa's international health insurance arm was hit by a malicious act in its British office, putting the private information of almost 20,000 Australian customers in danger.
The company admitted on Friday that an employee had "inappropriately copied and removed some customer information" at its Bupa Global division, which provides international health insurance for frequent travellers or people who work overseas.
"The data taken includes: names, dates of birth, nationalities, and some contact and administrative details including Bupa insurance membership numbers," Bupa Global managing director Sheldon Kenton said.

Global Health Ltd helping Australian healthcare become fax-free

14:00 17 Jul 2017
ReferralNet Secure Messaging meets all current Australian security and privacy standards.
As the messaging network grows, so does Global Health's potential customer base
Global Health Ltd (ASX:GLH) is playing a key role in the Australian Digital Health Agency’s (ADHA) trials for secure messaging.
The trials are a vital step to the healthcare industry becoming fax-free, a structural shift that will result in considerable cost savings.
The ADHA and the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (RACGP) have helped fast-tracked interoperability efforts after listening to key partners in the healthcare industry.
ReferralNet Secure Message Delivery is Global Health’s secure message delivery platform for the exchange of confidential clinical and patient information between healthcare providers.
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Health system to finally ditch faxes

By Dylan Bushell-Embling
Tuesday, 18 July, 2017
The Australian Digital Health Agency, Telstra and HealthLink are working to develop interoperable secure electronic messaging capabilities for healthcare providers.
The partners are developing a technology to allow healthcare data to flow between healthcare providers regardless of the software they are using or the organisation they work for.
The agency is working with HealthLink and Telstra to conduct a range of trials with healthcare providers nationwide. The goal is to develop a messaging system that can be scaled nationally.
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Australian Digital Health Agency working towards secure electronic messaging between healthcare providers

It would enable the secure flow of health data between healthcare providers, irrespective of the software they are using, the organisation they work for, or with whom they are communicating.

18/07/2017
The Australian Digital Health Agency (DHA) is working together with clinical information systems vendors to develop nationally scalable secure electronic messaging between healthcare providers.
The technology would enable the secure flow of health data from one healthcare provider to another, irrespective of the software they are using, the organisation they work for, or with whom they are communicating. There would be no more need for insecure communication channels like facsimile (fax).
DHA called for tenders in February this year for industry and clinical consortia to work together to fix these integration problems. After a competitive process, DHA has entered into a contract with HealthLink to lead a consortium to send secure messages between General Practitioners (GPs) and specialists, and with Telstra to lead a consortium to send discharge summaries to GPs and other healthcare providers.
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Safeguarding Patient Confidentiality in Accessing Electronic Health Records

Guest: Kylie Ward
Presenter: Henry Acosta
Guest Bio: Adjunct Professor Kylie Ward has had a successful and celebrated career as a Nursing Leader and Health and Aged Care Executive in Australia for over 20 years. She has held positions of Managing Director, Director of Clinical Operations, Director of Nursing and Midwifery, Director of the Division of Medicine, Associate Director of Women’s and Children’s Health and Executive Director of Nursing and Midwifery in three major health services in NSW and Victoria. She has been a NUM, After Hours Coordinator, Campus Manager, Bed Manager and Patient Flow Manager. Her clinical background is in intensive care and aged care.
Kylie has enjoyed a long history with ACN and the organisations that ACN is founded upon, RCNA and the College of Nursing. After years of membership and involvement in both organisations including RCNA Chapter Chair of Sydney West Kylie was awarded Fellowship of both organisations in 2007. In 2009 Kylie was awarded a Wharton Fellowship from the University of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Understanding the history and commitment of these two great organisations to nursing professionalism in Australia Kylie is committed to honouring the past to lead the Australian College of Nursing as a dynamic and influential key professional organisational well into the future.
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DHS is hiring five managers for its CIO group

By Justin Hendry on Jul 17, 2017 12:30PM

To take charge of digital transformation.

The Department of Human Services is looking for a slew of technology leaders to sit within its CIO group and drive forward the agency’s IT transformation.
It has just opened applications for five national manager positions to fill vacancies across the agency’s Canberra and Brisbane IT offices.
The senior executives will lead digital projects, vendor management, and infrastructure design and assurance branches in Canberra, and service network systems and aged care redevelopment branches in Brisbane.
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HIMSS Asia Pacific and Elsevier Launch the CMO of the Year Award

News provided by
Jul 17, 2017, 04:46 ET
SINGAPORE, July 17, 2017 /PRNewswire/ --
New award category launched in celebration of the fifth year of the HIMSS-Elsevier Digital Healthcare Award in Asia Pacific 
Nomination process is now open and will close on 4 August 2017 
HIMSS Asia Pacific, a cause-based, not-for-profit organization focused on better health through information technology (IT), and Elsevier, the information analytics company specializing in science and health, are proud to launch the Chief Medical Officer (CMO) of the Year Award as part of the Asia Pacific HIMSS-Elsevier Digital Healthcare Award 2017.
Now in its fifth year, the HIMSS-Elsevier Digital Healthcare Award recognizes outstanding achievements and innovations globally in the use of health information and technology to advance patient care and safety. The launch of the CMO of the Year Award serves to give recognition to senior clinical executives who advocate the advancement of patient safety and quality care and who are driving the adoption of healthcare information technology in their organizations.
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Detailed Clinical Model Library v4.5 July 2017 Release

Created on Monday, 17 July 2017
The Clinical Informatics unit is pleased to announce the latest release of the Australian Digital Health Agency’s Detailed Clinical Model Library (v4.5).
You can download the full release file bundle from the following location on the Agency website:
The accompanying release note outlines changes in the Detailed Clinical Models and the triggers for the changes.
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Cyber Security Operations Manager

  • Recently created Government Agency
  • Location – Brisbane CBD
  • Cyber Operations Lead
Tasked with improving health outcomes for Australians through the delivery of digital healthcare systems and the national digital health strategy for Australia, the Australian Digital Health Agency commenced operations in July 2016 and is responsible for national digital health services and systems, with a focus on engagement, innovation, clinical quality, and safety. The Agency's focus is on putting data and technology safely to work for patients, consumers and the healthcare professionals who look after them.
The role has a strong strategic focused with elements of technically hands on activity. You must have excellent stakeholder engagement and management skills, whilst being able to effectively bridge the communication gap between the technical risks to the overall business risks. Providing delivery of pragmatic and secure ICT solutions while driving continuous improvement in our cyber security space. Taking the lead in the delivery and operations of the cyber security operations centre; lead the design and implementation of processes to ensure that Agency continues its journey in the cyber space. This role will give you exposure to key stakeholders and driving risk assessment, cyber operations, compliance monitoring, technical advice and security incident response and co-ordination.
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Be extremely afraid: Elon Musk has a grim warning for US governors

Matt O'Brien
Published: July 16 2017 - 11:57AM
Providence, Rhode Island: Tesla chief executive Elon Musk has warned a bipartisan gathering of US governors that government regulation of artificial intelligence is needed because it poses a "fundamental risk to the existence of human civilisation".
But first, he asked for some governors to lift a different kind of regulation: state franchise dealership laws that ban the direct sale of his company's electric cars to consumers.
Musk spoke broadly about solar energy, space travel, self-driving cars and other emerging technology during a question-and-answer session at the summer conference of the National Governors Association in Rhode Island on Saturday.
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NBN costs put brake on internet speeds

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM July 18, 2017

Anthony Klan

Millions of Australians will see their internet speeds fall when they are moved on to the National Broadband Network, despite still being charged the same for access.
The cost structure of the superfast internet project — required in order to pay back the federal government $49 billion in construction costs — has meant ­telcos are being charged very high prices for downloads.
These high bandwidth charges — tiny under the nation’s existing Telstra and Optus broadband networks — has meant telcos are buying the minimum, resulting in NBN speeds plummeting during peak times, such as after 5pm on weekdays.
NBN Co has admitted its bandwidth pricing is a key factor ­behind speed issues, problems not seen in New Zealand where its broadband network does not levy such fees.
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Small businesses ‘lose money on NBN switch’

  • The Australian
  • 12:00AM July 19, 2017

Anthony Klan

Sam Buckingham-Jones

The Council of Small Business Australia says its members are frustrated and “shocked” with slow connections and poor service under the National Broadband Network, with the problems causing many businesses to suffer substantial losses.
The comments come as a top telco analyst says some NBN providers appear to be building business models based on the expectation the federal government will write down billions of dollars from the value of the network, meaning it will recover less of its investment to make way for faster and cheaper net speeds.
The small-business council’s chief executive, Peter Strong, said what the public was told about the NBN was “not the reality” and slow speeds hampered many businesses. “When people think NBN, they think fast internet but then they sign up and find they are getting slower speeds than they were before,” he said. “We were told it would be so fast it would shock us. It has shocked us but not because it’s fast.”
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ACCAN’s 5 things you need to know about the NBN

You’ve heard some things are on a “need to know” basis, but with the NBN, ACCAN’s five are things you definitely need to know.
The NBN.
It has moved from a mostly fibre to the premises (FttP) system to one that encompasses a mix of technologies, known as the MTM or Multi-Technology Mix.
Some have suggested MTM stands for Malcolm Turnbull’s Mess or Malcolm Turnbull’s Mistake, but let’s not talk about the Liberal Party.
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Rowland says NBN costs more, but does less

Labor's shadow communications spokesperson Michelle Rowland has described the national broadband network as a "second-rate network that costs more and does less" in the wake of reports that costs were putting a brake on NBN speeds.
Rowland said while a report in The Australian on Tuesday had quoted an NBN Co spokesman as saying that the CVC cost was a key determinant of the slow speeds experienced by consumers, the chief executive of NBN Co, Bill Morrow, had said the exact opposite on 11 May.
"So, which one is it?" Rowland asked. "The lack of coherence on these fundamental issues is remarkable.
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NBN problems will get worse as rollout proceeds: Patton

Internet Australia executive director Laurie Patton says unless there is a quick turnaround in thinking, the problems experienced by people who are switching to the NBN will get worse as the rollout proceeds.
Patton, who has been a constant critic of the multi-technology mix that the Coalition Government has opted for, told the radio station 2GB on Tuesday that the NBN Co was trying to use aging copper wires which did not deliver the speeds that people wanted now or in the future.
He spoke to host Ben Fordham on a day when a report in The Australian claimed that NBN costs were behind the slow speeds that consumers are experiencing.
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  • Jul 19 2017 at 5:36 PM

The gap between NBN promise and reality

My internet speeds plummeted when I moved house recently. It didn't matter how expensive my broadband plan was, nor the fact I had only shifted a few blocks away.
Rather than being connected to the internet through the hybrid fibre coaxial cable, my new street was still back on the old copper telephone lines.
Adjustments to ADSL technology may have greatly improved speeds over copper lines but given the growing and massive demand for data, the result still seems like putting lipstick on an ageing pig.
Nor is it as if Telstra is too interested in investing much to upgrade either cable or copper given their previous network is being gradually subsumed into the government-owned monopoly of NBN Co, the owner of the national broadband network.
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Fifield predicts 5G revolution for Australia, ignores NBN

Communications Minister Mitch Fifield clearly believes in the slogan that a former Labor prime minister, Julia Gillard, used in her last election campaign: moving forward.
Fifield has moved on to the next phase of his life: yesterday he gave a 2368-word speech at a telecommunications conference in Sydney and did not mention the word NBN even once.
He waxed lyrical about 5G, the proposed next telecommunications standard. You can see the entire speech here.
Fifield said: "I believe that the imminent arrival of 5G mobile technology will be a truly revolutionary event in the telecommunications industry. In fact, the arrival of 5G may well be an inflection point not just for the telecoms sector, but for the entire Australian economy."
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ACCC cracks down on 'misleading' NBN speed claims

Lucy Battersby
Published: July 20 2017 - 6:09PM
Telecommunications companies are misleading customers over broadband internet speeds and the worst offenders will likely face prosecution over dodgy advertising by the end of the year, the consumer watchdog says.
Chairman Rod Sims said the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) would conduct "compliance sweeps" of broadband marketing and telco websites later this year in a bid to keep telcos honest about speeds available on the national broadband network.  
"Right now, consumers are not getting the basic information they need to make an informed choice. Indeed, they are often being misled," Mr Sims said on Thursday.
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  • Jul 21 2017 at 8:28 AM

NBN complaints? We're getting what we voted for

It is probably of some surprise to Communications Minister Mitch Fifield that sentiment is suddenly turning so pointedly against the Coalition-flavoured national broadband network.
The minister did the media rounds this month to trumpet the fact the plan to connect the nation to high-speed broadband is halfway through, arriving for his interviews with the air of a man who feels he is fulfilling his remit to the letter.
There are now about 5.7 million premises in Australia able to connect to the NBN, and about 2.4 million people have signed up, Mr Fifield said the network will be 75 per cent built by mid-2018, and will be finished by 2020. By the government's own narrow definition of success it is in clover, it promised to get the network built quicker than Labor, and it is ... but it is finally being made to realise that this is not enough.
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Enjoy!
David.