Japan developing wooden satellites to cut space junk BBC. Brilliant!
20 striking findings from 2020 Pew Research Center
52 things I learned in 2020 Flux[x], Medium
In too deep: when Gladys’ and John’s rorts go wrong
Gladys Berejiklian's defence of pork barrelling will hardly enthuse ratepayers in Batemans Bay, or taxpayers for that matter. The local government debacle over a Leisure Centre, which got the tick from Deputy Premier John Barilaro in dubious circumstances is the quintessential object lesson in why governments should do their homework before they start throwing money around for political reasons. Elizabeth Minter reports.Read »
The Most Dangerous People on the Internet in 2020
Wired: “For many of us, 2020 has been a very dangerous year. Alongside the usual headline grabbers like wars, violent crime, and terrorism, we also faced more insidious, creeping threats: a pandemic that has claimed more than 300,000 American lives, and the lives of 1.5 million people worldwide, thanks in part to waves of viral lies dismissing Covid-19’s deathly serious effects. Hackers who have spied on, attacked, and extorted countless companies and government institutions—including even hospitals—during a global health crisis. And a US president who has sought to fundamentally undermine both the response to the Covid-19 pandemic and democracy itself with nakedly self-serving, corrosive misinformation. In a locked-down and socially distanced year that for many of us was spent more online than off, the presence of those dangers on the internet has never felt more real. Digital threats and information warfare were, in 2020, some of the most harmful forces in our society. Every year, WIRED assembles a list of the most dangerous people on the internet. In some respects, the actions of this year’s candidates resemble those of years past, from destructive hacking to sowing disinformation. But in a year where human society seemed more fragile than ever, the consequences of those actions have never been more grave…”
For the first time, companies will be required to report their true owners to the government, largely ending anonymous shell companies in a country that’s long served as one of the world’s top tax havens for criminals and wrongdoers.
ICIJ has repeatedly homed in on the role of shell companies in tax evasion, global inequality and illicit enterprises such as human trafficking, drug rings, arms dealing, and terrorism through investigations like FinCEN Files, Panama Papers, Luanda Leaks and more.
See our story on what brought about the historic legislation, as we’ll be closely watching its implementation and the future of the global fight against corruption and financial secrecy.
NETFLIX VICTORY
A U.S. judge made a First Amendment ruling in favor of Netflix and “The Laundromat,” a film inspired by the Panama Papers. It’s the latest legal stumble for the founders of Mossack Fonseca, the law firm at the heart of the investigation.
TRICKS OF THE TRADE
ICIJ’s award-winning data team shares the tools, tips, and inspiration they rely on to navigate intensive investigations like the FinCEN Files in this Q&A
A ‘REAL LIFE CRIME NOVEL’
We talk to ICIJ member Eva Jung about how she uncovered Denmark’s biggest money laundering scandal and more in the latest installment of Meet The Investigators.