Tuesday, November 03, 2020

Cyber hacking iSentia

Canterbury Bulldogs luminaries Chris Anderson and Kevin Moore are personally being sued for millions as the fallout from their failed labour hire companies deepens.

Bulldogs legends Chris Anderson and Kevin Moore sued by ATO



Exclusive: Rashida Tlaib and AOC have a proposal for a fairer, greener financial system — public banking Vox 

 

These Landlords File the Most Evictions in D.C.Washington CityPaper

 

People to Autocrats: Not So Fast Foreign Policy in Focus 


 A MUMBAI-STYLE ATTACK IN VIENNA:  At least two dead and 15 injured in Austrian terror attack: Police hunt ‘multiple suspects’ after gun rampage and ‘suicide bomb explosion’ in streets of Vienna on city’s final night before lockdown.



'A feather duster': Critics say draft laws for national corruption watchdog fall short

    Media monitoring services are used by a number of Australian government departments to funnel the internet for discussion and media surrounding their department into digestible summaries.

Reports and alerts are then provided to media teams as well as senior management to keep them across the big issues affecting their area of interest.

In order to offer these services, media monitoring services need the contact details for a number of department employees, including senior figures, as well as potentially sensitive information on strategic priorities. It's not yet known whether these details have been captured by the attackers.

A number of government departments have been affected by a ransomware attack against media monitoring service iSentia


The QR code has turned COVID-19 check-ins into a golden opportunity for marketing and data companies


Sydney concert promoter Harpreet Singh Sahni confesses to $50 million cryptocurrency scam