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How Parenting Will Test Your Resilience, With Hugh Van Cuylenburg

How Parenting Will Test Your Resilience, With Hugh Van Cuylenburg
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An Aussie Film, The Castle - The Good Men Project

It s Google and Facebook v The Lucky Country

Google and Facebook threaten to cut Australians access to their platforms Google won t pay for news content shared on its platform. Facebook will prevent sharing Australian Government not impressed or intimidated More evidence that Big Tech is running scared of the trend towards meaningful regulation Google has made an explicit threat to the Australian government, at a Senate hearing no less, that it will make its search engine unavailable in the country if legislation forcing it and its ilk to pay for journalism and news stories shared on their platforms becomes law. A few hours ago, in course of a video link to the hearing, Melanie Silva, the managing director of Google Australia and New Zealand, said the company would cut primary search abilities for Australian users and walk away from AU$4 billion in advertising revenues if the proposed News Media Bargaining Code makes it to the Statute Book.

Findings only add to political sledging

Findings only add to political sledging Findings only add to political sledging December 22, 2020 10.00pm Normal text size The Age, email letters@theage.com.au. Please include your home address and telephone number. HOTEL QUARANTINE INQUIRY Findings only add to political sledging The ‘‘scathing’’ findings of the Victorian inquiry into hotel quarantine (‘‘Shoddy is as shoddy did, and 801 died’’, 22/12) highlight the use of a privatised and casualised security workforce as a primary failure. Does anyone really believe that Victorian Labor’s opposite number in the Liberals would have made better decisions, or been more likely to accept responsibility for fatal failings in the pandemic response? Does anyone truly believe that an approach which blatantly preferred the economy to humanity would have resulted in fewer deaths?

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