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Tuesday, May 14, 2024

‘$$landed’: How a Commonwealth Bank manager took millions in bribes

I believe the public has the right to know the secret world."
For the first time ever, a former spy for China's notorious secret police – one of the most powerful arms of the country's intelligence apparatus – goes public, exposing the covert and illegal operations he was ordered to carry out on foreign soil, including in Australia.

Secret Service Won’t Budge in Moving Security Zone Farther From GOP Convention in Milwaukee.“Republican officials met with the Secret Service and strongly urged them to move the free speech zone further than a quarter mile from the venue. The agency refused.”


The funding is an 11-fold increase compared to the $24.7 million lllincluded in the previous budget.

The announcement comes two weeks after over one million sign-in and identity details of ClubNSW patrons were exposed following a data breach.

Gov to inject $288m into Digital ID


 Australia green-lit PwC days before Senate report into tax leaks scandal dropped


Starmer is setting out to be a man who does not rise to the challenges Funding the Future


‘$$landed’: How a Commonwealth Bank manager took millions in bribes

“I am so shocked. I want to vomit. I cannot believe we were this stupid,” read the message to Jon Waldron on December 17, 2014.
Seven days later, on Christmas Eve, 2014, Waldron and the manager who sent that message were dismissed from the Commonwealth Bank of Australia after internal investigators discovered mystery payments into Waldron’s CBA account.
Former Commowealth Bank manager Jon Waldron was found guilty of taking bribes from a US-based technology company.
Former Commowealth Bank manager Jon Waldron was found guilty of taking bribes from a US-based technology company.CREDIT: COLE BENNETTS
The New Zealand-born Waldron, former general manager of IT infrastructure engineering at the bank, was found guilty last week by a NSW District Court judge of taking bribes, or seven counts of corruptly receiving money as a reward for facilitating business opportunities with the bank.
He was also found guilty of three counts of aiding and abetting a co-accused to receive bribes.

The payments

Waldron’s trial heard that ServiceMesh Inc, a California-based cloud computing startup, supplied software services to the bank from 2009.
The Crown alleged the principal shareholder of ServiceMesh, Eric Pulier, paid more than $US2 million to Waldron and an IT executive manager at CBA in 2014 as a reward for smoothing the path for ServiceMesh to ink two deals with the bank, in 2013 and 2014. Pulier has denied wrongdoing.

Text message from Jon Waldron

$$landed13 April 2014
Waldron received the lion’s share of the money, the court heard, and the payments were received without the Commonwealth Bank’s knowledge.
$$landed,” Waldron wrote in a text message to a ServiceMesh sales consultant on April 13, 2014, after meeting Pulier in Santa Monica on April 11.
The court heard this message was sent before the first payment of $US99,971.02 ($104,648.82 at the time) was transferred to Waldron’s CBA account on May 16, 2014.
The prosecution alleged the CBA contracts were important to ServiceMesh because the New York Stock Exchange-listed Computer Sciences Corporation had agreed in October 2013 to buy the company.
Under that agreement, ServiceMesh shareholders stood to receive an additional payment totalling tens of millions of dollars if the company achieved revenue exceeding $US20 million between January 1, 2013, and January 31, 2014.
“Without both deals, SMI would not have surpassed revenue of US$20 million in the time frame provided,” District Court Judge Phillip Mahony said in a judgment on May 8.
“With the revenue from the two deals SMI became entitled to a further payment of over US$98 million.”

‘I want this sorted ASAP’

The court heard Waldron sent an email on December 17, 2013, applying pressure to CBA’s manager of software services over the first of the two ServiceMesh deals, which was finalised days later on December 22.
Waldron wrote that the “commercial sense has already been verified”, and the executive manager of IT engineering “and I want this sorted ASAP within the next 48 hours”.

THE BRIBES

The NSW District Court found Waldron corruptly received the following payments in 2014 in his CBA or ASB Bank accounts:
  • May: US$99,971.02
  • July: US$199,980.26
  • August: US$299,980.40
  • November: $300,000
  • November: US$300,000
  • December: US $350,000
  • December: US$350,000
Marcus Nicholson, the manager who received the email, specialised in software licensing. He sent an email the next day to his boss, suggesting Waldron’s email “could be construed as intimidation”.
Nicholson wrote that the “total value of this deal is $10.5 million over three years” and noted CBA was being asked to pay $3.3 million more than a previous proposal – a deal that had been rejected as too expensive.

Waldron’s evidence

Waldron maintained his innocence and pleaded not guilty to the charges. He gave evidence that he “received payments for work done and for work to be done”, the judge said.
The court heard Waldron emailed his wife on December 21, 2013, and wrote: “By the way, confirmed: $1.5 million.”
He gave evidence that was a reference to “how much money I could make for two years” at a job in Europe, an explanation the judge rejected.

Email from Jon Waldron

Email from Jon WaldronBy the way, confirmed: $1.5mNew MessageFromJon Waldron21 December 2013
The court heard that the payments to Waldron were discovered after an initial investigation was launched into his use of a corporate credit card.
“It was a requirement of his employment contract that he had an account with the CBA and a condition of employment that the bank was able to look at CBA accounts held by its employees,” the judge said.

Sentence hearing

The court will hear submissions on sentence on August 14.
A CBA spokesperson said in a statement that the bank “had referred the relevant matters to the NSW Police in early 2015”.
“Since that time, we have co-operated with the police and authorities throughout their investigations and throughout the court process.”



Monday, May 13, 2024

Populism and State Power

Populism and State Power

A hard look at the use of the notion of populism in recent political discourse, starting with the curious lack of self-professed populists.


TechCrunch: “Microsoft has reaffirmed its ban on U.S. police departments from using generative AI for facial recognition through Azure OpenAI Service, the company’s fully managed, enterprise-focused wrapper around OpenAI tech. Language added Wednesday to the terms of service for Azure OpenAI Service more obviously prohibits integrations with Azure OpenAI Service from being used “by or for” police departments for facial recognition in the U.S., including integrations with OpenAI’s current — and perhaps future — image-analyzing models. 

A separate new bullet point covers “any law enforcement globally,” and explicitly bars the use of “real-time facial recognition technology” on mobile cameras, like body cameras and TechCrunch, to attempt to identify a person in “uncontrolled, in-the-wild” environments. 



The changes in policy come a week after Axon, a maker of tech and weapons products for military and law enforcement, announced a new product that leverages OpenAI’s GPT-4 generative text model to summarize audio from body cameras. Critics were quick to point out the potential pitfalls, like hallucinations (even the best generative AI models today invent facts) and racial biases introduced from the training data (which is especially concerning given that people of color are far more likely to be stopped by police than their white peers)…”


Stack Overflow bans users en masse for rebelling against OpenAI partnership — users banned for deleting answers to prevent them being used to train ChatGPT Tom’s Hardware. Open theft. As usual. Just like Reddit. Training sets = looting.

 

Writers and publishers in Singapore reject a government plan to train AI on their work Rest of World

 

Slop is the new name for unwanted AI-generated content Simon Willison’s Weblog

 

* * *

Big brains divided over training AI with more AI: Is model collapse inevitable? The Register. The deck: “Gosh, here’s us thinking recursion was a solved problem.”

 

AI, Reducing Internalities and Externalities Cass Sunstein, SSRN. “AI-powered Choice Engines might also take account of externalities, and they might nudge or require consumers to do so as well. Different consumers care about different things, of course, which is a reason to insist on a high degree of freedom of choice, even in the presence of internalities and (to some extent) externalities. But it is important to emphasize that AI might be enlisted by insufficiently informed or self-interested actors, who might exploit inadequate information or behavioral biases, and thus reduce consumer welfare.” It’s a phishing equilibrium, so not “might” but “will,” indeed “already are.”

 

OpenAI offers a peek behind the curtain of its AI’s secret instructions TechCrunch


Senate Ctee supports Tax Accountability & Fairness bill on PRRT, promoter penalty & other integrity reforms

ATO Deputy Commissioner John Ford said the ATO had an expert team of staff who were equipped to detect and identify tax crime activities, and these capabilities continued to strengthen.

“Specifically, this training has further enhanced SFCT partner agencies’ understanding of the resources and platforms available to share leads, support case development and further enhance information-sharing around crypto assets,” Deputy Commissioner Ford said.

ATO's Serious Financial Crime Taskforce receives training to combat crypto crime


Australia green-lit PwC days before Senate report into tax leaks scandal dropped


Senate Ctee supports Tax Accountability & Fairness bill on PRRT, promoter penalty & other integrity reforms


The PwC (Price Waterhouse Coopers) tax scandal shocked Australia, but the issues with consulting (accounting) giants are bigger than just one firm. Four Corners investigates the revolving door of staffers who’ve moved between the likes of EY, Deloitte and federal government departments. Whistleblowers also expose how KPMG, one of Canberra’s biggest clients, got cosy with Defence. Broadcast as Shadow State on ABC iview on 6 August 2023 and ABC TV on 7 August 2023. Four Corners is Australia’s premier investigations documentary series."

Shadow State: big 4

Tax advisers will be required to look beyond what is legally possible and consider the “reputational, commercial, and wider economic consequences” of their advice under global ethical rules coming next year.
The new global standards seek to restore trust in a profession battered by investigations such as Lux Leaks, the Panama Papers, the Paradise Papers and the Pandora Papers which revealed advisers helped corporations and individuals around the world use tax havens to avoid paying tax.


Zoom - Exposing the Consultancy Cover-up


Lobbying is at the heart of government. Who has access to and influence over key government officials shapes the decisions governments make - and how they make them.

The ability to influence government is certainly essential to democratic politics. Yet how lobbying occurs federally undermines Australia's democracy.

This lobbying is typically shrouded in secrecy. Bound up with such secrecy is unfair access for "insider" groups, especially powerful commercial interests. Such secrecy and unfairness risk encouraging corruption, particularly quid pro quo deals between government decision-makers and lobbyists.

In a disappointing twist, the report fails to recommend that the code be strengthened in these ways. It says this is due to "the narrow field of views heard by the committee during the hearing and the need to better understand a broader perspective".

Senate report on lobbying passes the buck on improving transparency or legislation


How Norway took control of their oil and gas industry and starting taxing them at 78%


‘Funk Money’: The End of Empires, The Expansion of Tax Havens, and Decolonization as an Economic and Financial Event Past & Present


Long Covid at Work: A Manager’s Guide Harvard Business Review. Under, I kid you not, the rubric of “Diversity And Inclusion.”


Our Lives in Their Portfolios: Why Asset Managers Own the World — by Brett Christophers (review) Marx and Philosophy


Run, Bezos, Run Crooked Timber. 


A Global War Regime New Left Review


The liberal international order is slowly coming apartThe Economist


When Employers Violate the NLRA, the Harm is Always Irreparable On Labor