Thursday, November 20, 2025

New Comprehensive Guide to Help Newsrooms Protect Journalists from Online Abuse

Klimt painting second-most expensive artwork sold at auction 


Traders Magazine: “The International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) has published its Final Report on the Tokenization of Financial Assets. The financial sector has been actively exploring distributed ledger technology (DLT) to deliver services and tokenize financial assets. While tokenization may enhance efficiency and transparency, it also introduces new risks — or amplifies existing ones — that regulators must understand and address to protect investors.”


New Comprehensive Guide to Help Newsrooms Protect Journalists from Online Abuse

PEN America: “In response to the alarming rise of abuse and threats targeting journalists, PEN America and the Coalition Against Online Violence have released a groundbreaking guide, Best Practices for News Organizations: How to Protect and Support Journalists Harassed Online, to empower industry leaders to protect their people amidst an escalating crackdown on the free press in the U.S. and internationally. Developed in close consultation with over a dozen newsrooms and civil society organizations, the guide addresses the rapidly evolving intimidation tactics journalists face—including doxing, impersonation, threats, cyber mobs, and coordinated harassment campaigns—and provides newsroom leaders, managers, and editors with actionable strategies for safeguarding staff and freelancers.


 “Journalists must be online to do their jobs. But that visibility, alongside their role holding power to account, can make journalists lightning rods for harassment and threats,” said Viktorya Vilk, Director of Digital Safety and Free Expression at PEN America and co-lead on the project.  “Unchecked abuse doesn’t just silence individual journalists, it is deliberately deployed to drive talent out of the profession and undermine a free and independent press.” 

M“Online abuse does not affect every journalist equally or in the same ways. Journalists from historically marginalized identities are disproportionately targeted not only for their work, but for who they are, leading some to leave the industry altogether,” said Jeje Mohamed, holistic safety and security consultant and co-lead on the project. 

“Even newsrooms that are committed to journalist safety don’t always know where to start. This guide provides step-by-step support.” The Best Practices guide offers a menu of flexible recommendations tailored to newsrooms of all sizes, covering critical areas such as:

  • Raising awareness and shifting newsroom culture on journalists’ safety
  • Developing policies and protocols to address online abuse and other safety challenges
  • Providing digital safety training and building capacity for managers, staff, and freelancers
  • Bolstering organizational and individual digital security
  • Fostering a supportive environment for targeted journalists
  • Issuing statements of support for targeted journalists and news organizations
  • Documenting harassment and delegating monitoring and review..”

KPMG expands consulting - Colab Melbourne Project director vanishes leaving $7m tax debt

 

KPMG expands consulting arm amidst Big Four job cull 

Profession
20 November 2025 

Amid various redundancies in the consulting sector at the top end of town, KPMG consulting is going against the grain and hiring up to 200 roles.

Following news of EY’s most recent cut to its consulting arm with the slashing of 50 jobs, news has surfaced that KPMG is looking to build out its consulting sector with a substantial number of additional roles.

On Thursday (20 November), The Aussie Corporate posted that the professional services firm wasn’t following suit in terms of a “plummeting” consulting arm and was looking to increase its operation.

The popular professional services Instagram page posted a message that read: “To balance out the redundancy chat, KPMG Consulting is recruiting over 200 roles. New national managing partner righting some previous wrongs”.

In conversation with Accounting Times, a KPMGspokesperson responded positively, yet neither confirmed nor denied the number of positions it was looking to hire for.

The spokesperson said the firm had, and was, looking to open roles within its consulting branch to bolster both opportunities and capabilities.

“We have opened up a number of roles in our consulting division as we respond to client demands and provide opportunities to our people to grow,” they said.

“The new hires will build on our existing capabilities.”

The expansion comes after chief financial officer, Brad Miller, was appointed as head of the firm’s consulting division in September after senior partner Paul Howes left for the rebranded Sayers Group.

With the appointment, Miller’s priority was outlined to “conduct a national listening tour of partners and staff in the struggling division to determine what is working and what is not working”, according to a report by the AFR.

The expansion of KPMG’s consulting branch also contradicts its earlier downturn in annual revenue, which suffered a 20 per cent decrease from $915 million to $749 million.


Colab Melbourne Project director vanishes leaving $7m tax debt

Liquidators of a Melbourne business are hunting for answers after the company’s director mysteriously “disappeared”, abandoning employees and owing millions in tax and superannuation.
Sarah PerilloSarah Perillo
2 min read
November 20, 2025 - 3:05PM
The Australian Business Network
The director of a collapsed Melbourne company has reportedly “disappeared” without a trace.
    The director of a collapsed Melbourne company has reportedly “disappeared” without a trace, leaving behind a whopping $7m tax bill.
    Colab Melbourne Project, which was understood to provide glass facades and window installation services, was ordered into liquidation following legal action from the ATO, with over $7.1m owed in taxes and superannuation. 
    Appointed liquidator Philip Newman of PCI Partners claimed he was told by a former employee that the director vanished late last year.
    Company records reveal Vasanthnath Daka as the current sole director and shareholder of the business.
    “(An ex-employee) advised that the director disappeared in around November 2024, and he has been unable to contact anyone from the company since then,” Mr Newman said in his report to creditors.
    The liquidator said he will now report Mr Daka to the corporate regulator for “possible prosecution” after failing to handover the company’s financial details. 
    Colab Melbourne Project was understood to provide glass facades and window installation services.
    “To date, my attempts to contact the director have been unsuccessful,” he said.
    “Further, I have not been provided with any books and records of the company. 
    “I will shortly be reporting the failure of the director to provide me with (books and records) to the ASIC for investigation and possible prosecution.”
    He also reached out to the company’s listed accountant, who said the firm had never provided any services to the business.
    “I wrote to the company’s pre-appointment accountant identified from the ASIC search to seek copies of any records they hold,” he said.
    “This accountant advised that they never provided accounting services and have no company records.”
    The company, established in October 2023, has a registered office and principal place of business in the Docklands, Melbourne. 
    “My enquiries with the agent engaged to market this property indicated that the company no longer operates from this site and they have no contact details available for the company or director,” Mr Newman said.
    The ATO claimed $3.6m was owed in superannuation, Mr Newman said, with a further $3.4m owed to the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation. 
    The liquidator said he will now report Mr Daka to the corporate regulator after failing to handover the company’s financial details.
    No secured claims against the company or bank accounts held in the business’ name were identified during Mr Newman’s initial investigations. 
    “Given the lack of any bank accounts identified for the company I have been unable to assess any trading activity that may have been conducted prior to the liquidation commencing,” he said.
    Searches revealed no cars or real estate owned by the business, nor any property registered under Mr Daka’s name.
    Mr Newman said his probe into the company’s affairs had so far relied on tips from creditors and other third parties. 
    “In the absence of the director’s co-operation, I have been unable to determine the reasons for the failure of the business other than the non-payment of the debt owing to the Deputy Commissioner of Taxation,” he said.
    Mr Newman was first appointed to the company by the Federal Court of Australia on July 30, after the tax office launched a winding up order against the company. 
    Mr Daka could not be contacted for comment. 


    Tower of secrets: the Russian money behind a Donald Trump skyscraper

    One  person of integrity can make

    a difference.

    - Elie Wiesel


    AFP supports government sanctions on two dark web services and their operators who are responsible for significant cyber incidents against Australia


    America’s corporate meltdown: 655 big firms bankrupt as 2025 crisis surges to 15-year highEconomic Times


    Tower of secrets: the Russian money behind a Donald Trump skyscraper

    The Trump Toronto reveals links between shadowy post-Soviet wealth and a future president


    Sun fires off 2nd-strongest flare of 2025, sparking radio blackouts across Africa.


    This App Lets ICE Track Vehicles and Owners Across the Country 404 Media


    We Hacked Flock Safety Cameras in under 30 Seconds YouTube


    Epstein email says Andrew had photo taken with Virginia Giuffre


    Justice Department struggles as thousands exit and few are replaced

    Washington Post via MSN: “The Justice Department has lost thousands of experienced attorneys since the start of the Trump administration and has backfilled a fraction of the open jobs, with the process snarled by a lack of qualified candidates, bureaucratic delays and hiring freezes, according to people familiar with hirings in the department. 

    Last year, roughly 10,000 attorneys worked across the Justice Department and its components, including the FBI. Justice Connection, an advocacy group that has been tracking departures, estimates that around 5,500 people — not all of them attorneys — have quit the department, been fired or taken a buyout offered by the Trump administration. 

    The department did not provide a breakdown of attorney departures, but officials did not deny that widespread vacancies exist. The department’s struggle to fill vacancies reflects a dramatic shift for a law enforcement agency that has long attracted high-performing alumni from the nation’s top-ranked law schools and law firms. 

    Multiple people familiar with the student bodies at top-ranked law schools and the department’s hiring process said the share of recent graduates across the political spectrum who are applying for jobs at the Justice Department has plummeted. 

    The department has had difficulty finding qualified candidates for open slots, according to more than a half-dozen people familiar with the process, several of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment on the record…”




    Crypto market sheds $1.2tn as traders shun speculative assets Financial Times

     

    Crypto’s Riskiest Coins Plummet to Lows Not Seen Since Pandemic Bloomberg

     

    The Crypto Industry’s $28 Billion in ‘Dirty Money’New York Times: “No way is it that little.”

     

    US Politicians and Their Net Worth YouTube 

    Wednesday, November 19, 2025

    “Riots Raging”: The Misleading Story Fox News Told About Portland Before Trump Sent Troops

     

    Kash Patel’s Acts of Service

    The F.B.I. director isn’t just enforcing the President’s agenda at the Bureau—he’s seeking retribution for its past investigations of Donald Trump.

    Riots Raging”: The Misleading Story Fox News Told About Portland Before Trump Sent Troops

    ProPublica: “When President Donald Trump told reporters on Sept. 5 he’d started looking at sending the National Guard to Portland, Oregon, he said it was because of something he saw on television. He said the city was being destroyed by paid agitators. “What they’ve done to that place, it’s like living in hell,” he said, a comment that became an internet meme as some Portland residents juxtaposed it with tranquil images of the city. Trump didn’t say which channel he watched; he said at one point he saw something “today” and at another “last night.” 

    The evening before, on Sept. 4, Fox News aired a two-and-a-half-minute segment spotlighting protests outside a federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement field office in Portland. Similar footage aired the morning of Trump’s remarks. The president went on to announce Sept. 27 on Truth Social that he would send troops, saying that he was “authorizing Full Force, if necessary.” He later said he’d told Oregon’s governor, Tina Kotek, that “unless they’re playing false tapes, this looked like World War II. 

    Your place is burning down.” ProPublica examined months of Fox News’ coverage and reviewed more than 700 video clips posted to social media by protesters, counterprotesters and others in the three months preceding the Sept. 4 broadcast. The review found that the news network repeatedly provided a misleading picture of what was happening in Portland…”


    China has only bought 332,000 tons of U.S. soybeans since Trump made a deal with Xi Jinping that promised 12 million by year’s end Fortune



    Americans Want Billionaires Out Of Politics—And Think They’re A Threat To Democracy, Poll ShowsForbes


    Whatever happened to U.B.I.? Read Max

     

    Selling a Defective Dream New York Review



     “Gambling revenues account for over 1% of GDP in Australia and South Africa, meaningfully higher as a share of GDP than in New Zealand, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States.


    Road network of the Roman Empire


     NIMBYs will pay to keep low income people away.  Job market paper from Helena Pedrotti of NYU

    How HR Took Over the World

    The Blast Radius of Jeff Epstein BIG by Matt Stoller. With a focus on Larry Summers and his fabulous career.


    $475bn lost to US-backed global gag order shielding corporate tax cheaters


    Epstein Gave NY Times Journalist Tips About Trump. Why Did They Never Get Reported? The Intercept


    Notes on Harold Brodkey’s 1992 essay Notes on American Fascism, which was dismissed at the time but now seems prescient.


    How HR Took Over the World Economist. The Economist catches up with what a colleague has been complaining about for years, rule by HR ladies. 


    Kash Patel’s GF files $5 million lawsuit against podcaster for ‘insinuation’ she’s Mossad honeypotGrayzone (Chuck L). WTF? Did no one clue them in that the defendant can do discovery?


    Byte – A Visual Archive

    • “Byte? Before Hackernews, before Twitter, before blogs, before the web had been spun, when the internet was just four universities in a trenchcoat, there was *BYTE*. A monthly mainline of the entire personal computing universe, delivered on dead trees for a generation of hackers. Running from September 1975 to July 1998, its 277 issues chronicled the Cambrian explosion of the microcomputer, from bare-metal kits to the dawn of the commercial internet. Forget repackaged corporate press releases—*BYTE* was for the builders. Inside, you’d find Steve Ciarcia teaching you to build a speech synthesizer from scratch, the inner details of a RISC pipeline, deep dives into the guts of Smalltalk, and Jerry Pournelle’s legendary columns from Chaos Manor. This wasn’t just about what a computer could do, but *how* it did it. The source code of a revolution that continues to this day.
    • What? – This zoomable map shows every page of every issue of BYTE starting from the front cover of the first issue (top left) to the last page of the final edition (bottom right). The search bar runs RE2 regex over the full text of all 100k pages. The archive itself is not new, scans of BYTE have long existed on the Internet Archive and elsewhereon the net – but I hope seeing everything in single, searchable place offers a unique perspective.
    • Why? “[…] pop culture holds a disdain for history. Pop culture is all about identity and feeling like you’re participating. It has nothing to do with cooperation, the past or the future—it’s living in the present. I think the same is true of most people who write code for money. They have no idea where [their culture came from]—and the Internet was done so well that most people think of it as a natural resource like the Pacific Ocean, rather than something that was man-made. —Alan Kay, on Computing, Dr. Dobb’s Interview with Alan Kay
    • The relationship between Computing and its history is that of a willful amnesiac. We discard the past as fast as possible, convinced it cannot possibly contain anything of value. This is a mistake. The classic homilies are accurate: Failing to remember the past we are condemned to repeat it – as often as tragedy as farce.”

    Historical note from Central Coast about much admired former DC with innitials DC



    A taxing time for the next man at the top 

    Out of the Public Service and into the national presidency, Denis Cortese has new challenges at the ASCPA

    When Denis Cortese was New South Wales president of the Australian Society of CPAs, some members were uncertain about how he would handle the delicate issue of tax reform. The reason for their angst was Cortese's job as deputy commissioner of taxation. Although many of the Taxation Office's senior public servants belong to the society, a lot of the membership is on the other side of the fence, representing clients in clashes with the bureaucracy.

    Cortese laid concerns to rest by emerging as an enthusiastic advocate of tax reform - albeit one who would sometimes tactfully leave the public criticisms to other society leaders. Now retired from the tax office, he takes over as national president from April 1, and tax reform is going to remain high on the society's agenda. "I strongly believe it's time to change the tax system," Cortese says. "Governments and others have got to sit down and develop a better tax system ... In saying that, I'm not advocating a goods and services tax, but we have to reform the current system - that's a society policy and it's a policy I entirely agree with."

    Cortese takes on national leadership during a testing period for the society. Although it has done well in expanding its membership and promoting its post-graduate education programs throughout Asia, it has been embarrassed by a $2.7 million deficit in its latest financial year. The loss included a $1-million write-off of revenues previously overstated. Cortese is not critical of the way society executives have handled the affair. "Every decent organisation at some time or other encounters adversity. The test of the mettle of that organisation is how it deals with that."

    He acknowledges the concerns that were expressed by some members when he began his term as NSW divisional president in 1991. "Some practitioners were a bit leery that someone from the tax office was state president. Some journalists questioned how I could handle tax issues and properly represent the membership. My answer to that was that I didn't have to be the spokesperson for every issue." Cortese says one of the things he has been able to contribute to the society's leadership has been a better understanding of how government works. "People were able to benefit from my contact with government."

    Cortese appears to cope well with being an enforcer of rules that are not universally popular. He is a board member of the NSW Rugby League, and he also chairs the salary cap committee of the Australian Rugby League. That body occasionally attracts public criticism, much like the tax office. Of the latter, Cortese says: "Cost of compliance is an issue but it's really about the complexity of law and legislative change and whether there is a real clarity about what government is trying to achieve. I do recognise that all governments have an insatiable appetite for revenue. My only plea to people critical of those involved in tax administration is, don't shoot the messenger."


    Has the relationship between the public sector and the accounting profession been too adversarial? "My experience has been that there's been much advantage gained from working closely together and trying to get a good understanding of the different perspectives. On some issues, no matter how open the communication and the understanding of each other's point of view, one party is going to remain dissatisfied with the outcome. That's life."

    Cortese is proud of the reform that has already happened in the tax office, if not the tax system. "The tax office has gone a long way. I'm not talking so much about organisation structure, but the way the organisation interacts with the community - it takes advice from the community - and the way business is done. The path that it's setting fully recognises the impacts that technology is going to have on the community and the desire for a smaller government presence." He says electronic lodgment of tax returns is an example of the tax office leading the way in more efficient technology.

    New technology, including the Internet, will be central to the health of the society, and he has invested heavily in developing on-line services. Cortese says: "Something we need to identify and manage is the different impacts of technology on our membership. 

    The expectations of younger membership ... not just in reacting to technology but in terms of support, career progression and technical development are quite different to the expectations of our older generation. For the older practitioners, one of the things they are going to be most concerned about is succession planning ... They have to keep pace with what is happening in today's business world."


    TAXMAN JUST WANTS TO GET SOME RESPECT 

    Denis Cortese, the quietly spoken deputy commissioner of taxation in Sydney's city branch, concedes that the tax office and taxpayers will never be good mates. He does, however, want people to respect the office for being fair and helpful. That is why it has been taking out booths at home shows, shopping centres and meetings of elderly and disadvantaged citizens.

    Cortese is trying to change people's attitudes towards paying tax. "Some people would never pinch a packet of pins from Coles, but when they do their tax returns a new mentality cames over them," he says. "The tax office wants to help people and let them know what is expected of them."

    Cortese's office, one of the biggest in the country, covers Sydney's central business district, eastern suburbs and inner southern and western suburbs. His 1700 staff are responsible for scrutinising the returns of about a million taxpayers and 150,000 companies.

    In 1989-90 they collected $16.8 billion dollars in tax -- more than 21% of the national total. Of that, $9.7 billion came from the PAYE scheme (Cortese's office administers the PAYE system for the whole ssate, except for the Parramatta and Penrith regions). Companies paid $3.6 billion, while other individuals contributed $1.2 billion. The rest, about 13% of the total, came from sources such as sales tax, interest withholding tax and dividend withholding tax.

    Cortese is pleased with the big-company audit program, which netted the tax office an extra $452 million in taxes and penalties last year. Although he concedes that the office may once have partly deserved its reputation as the scourge of the corporatt world, he says the emphasis is now on conciliation and cooperation.

    Some issues though, will continue to go before the courts. "The level of aggro that used to be there doesn't really happen any more," he says. "We prefer to raise issues with companpan now so they can sort out their problems. But we are still after big returns -- that's why we are there."


    Each big-company audit costs the tax office about $250,000 a year. The investigations take about two years to complete.

    Cortese says the conciliatoto approach does not mean the tax office is getting soft. "Only four years ago the tax office was being accused of being unreasonable in its approach towards settling issues -- that we didn't understand the commercial realities.

    "More recently, peopleople saying that we have a better grip on things, that we are more practical and pragmatic. We recognise that in grey areas, it can be better to compromise than head to the High Court." He is keen to see an end to uneconomic cases, such as the recent one in which his office spent about $25,000 taking a case to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to collect$11,000 in tax.

    Cortese says that despite some teething problems, the first year of electronic tax lodgment has been a success. He expects 43% of returns to be lodged electronically at the Sydney office by the end of tax collection this year -- well above its aim of 30%. Most of those returns came from about 220 agents.

    Next year's stated aim is 45% but Cortese expects more. Other offices will get up to 60% electronic lodgment. This year the Sydney office was aiming to issue 80% of tax refunds within 14 days of receipt of electronic returns. It achieved 94%.

    Cortese wants to make it easier for business and individuals to comply with tax laws, and he has a team working on simplifying the statutes. As a reminder of this aim, three books sit on his desk: the 1922-25 Tax Act, which runs to about 50 pages; the 1936 Tax Act, which has about 250 pages; and the 1982 Consolidated Tax Act, which has more than 1250 pages.

    "It's a reflection of changes in the Australian business community," he says. "Pre-war life was fairly simple, but life in the 1960s and 1970s became more sophisticated. We are now part of the world community. Maybe we'll have two tax acts some day -- a 50-page one for ordinary people and a larger one for the rest."

    Cortese, 53, likens his job to that of a juggler. The balls he must keep in the air are taxpayers, tax professionals (including tax agents and solicitors who practice tax law), his staff and the expectations of government. Of these, he says staff are the most important. "If you look after staff, they will look after the taxpayers," he says. "If you don't look after your staff, then taxpayers will suffer."

    Changes to the way the tax office administers collections can mean personnel headaches for Cortese. For instance, if the office goes ahead with plans to decentralise its administration unit for PAYE, prescribed payments tax and fringe benfits tax, Cortese will have about 170 people with nothing to do. "It's important that we address that problem earlier so we can ease the difficulties of retraining staff and finding them other tasks to do," he says. "During the past two years we have looked at every area of the organisation and looked at the jobs that people have, redesigning those jobs where necessary."

    He says the office's returns-processing unit is a good example. Not long ago, tax returns would arrive at the office, be opened and then bundled off to the data processing area so their details could be keyed into a computer. Someone would then check the codes on the returns before they were sent back to the data processing area for processing. They would then be sent to another area, where they were checked again before notices were despatched.

    "It was like a Henry Ford production line," Cortese says. "Today the returns come in, the mail is opened and sorted, and then a team of people do all those things. They have control over their own work and are responsible for making sure things are right at the end of the day."

    Cortese's office has a budget this year of $52 million (down from last year's $57 million). It will spend almost $3 million, or 6% of its salary budget of $45 million, on training, including professional development, and honing skills,,leadership and team-building.

    "Nearly everybody in the organisation has, is, or will be going through some form of keyboard training and computer literacy training," he says. "There's also a need to equip more people in the organisation with technical tax and legal skills. That's not just teaching them tax law, but research skills and interpretation of law."

    Last year Cortese's office had trouble keeping up with demand in its personal enquiries section, so in March this year an officer development program was introduced there. "We trained about 100 people (including tax commissioner Trevor Boucher in a learning and publicity exercise) and they are available to us as a continuing resource when demand becomes too much," he says.

    Cortese's emphasis on service may well stem from his previous jobs. In 1952 he sold shoes in Leichhardt before working for a wholesale grocer. He joined the Public Service in 1954 as a telegram boy and later moved to the repatriation division (now Veterans' Affairs) to work with former prisoners of war and sick ex-servicemen.

    This is Cortese's 30th year in the tax office, for which he has worked in Canberra, Hobart and Sydney. He took up his position as deputy commissioner in 1984. He lives in Belrose, on Sydney's North Shore, and arriies at work each day about 7.45am.

    Cortese says his office is trying to lift its game in its dealings with tax agents and tax professionals, who play a significant part in tax collection. "We are trying to develop a closer one-to-one relationship with them, especially those with large clientele, be that in terms of tax paid by their clients or the number of returns they lodge."

    Cortese has about 12 people (and plans for more) knocking on agents' doors and introducing themselves, drawing the agents' attention to issues and offering the office's services when problems arise. "Agents must know that if they have problems there are people at the tax office who will listen," he says.

    He is pleased that not as many of his employees are being lured by big accounting firms and companies. This year he lost only three professionals. "It was a problem some years ago and it's still happening, but the employment market has changed drastically," he says. "Many firms are simply not recruiting, and because there are now people without jobs there is more competition."

    Cortese says it "really hurts" whenever an employee leaves. Generally, those that do are top operators. "Many people comment that there is a lack of expertise in the tax office, and yet our staff are always in demand.

    "Our salaries are around $35,000 to $40,000, but employees can get another$15,000 to $20,000 extra if they move. One fellow who left told me he didn't really want to leave because he enjoyed the work, but at the end of the day he had a mortgage and three children. It's pretty hard to counter that."

    What makes it difficult for Cortese is that tax office employees, being part of the Public Service, have their pay scales tied to those of other public servants. "Maybe the tax office should be a separatt employment market and be dealt with separately," he says.