
Is it a surprise that Australians don't trust politicians when the first piece of party communication they receive is a data harvesting form meant to deceive them?

Catima can also handle pkpass (Apple wallet) files now, although last I checked it chokes on "pkpasses", the zipped collective version
It might help if the media didn't continuously frame this like a two horse race
Microwave ovens are also non-ionising. Non-ionising radiation can cause things to heat up, but lacks the subtle damage that ionising radiation can do.
Mobile phone radiation is non-ionising. There is no known mechanism for it giving you cancer. Regardless of mechanism there's ample research on the topic, and no sign of a link
How about Usenet (1980)?
Despite the headline, this is being done by Thunderbird, not Mozilla
Thunderbird is completely independent of the Mozilla Corporation, the makers of Firefox. But the Mozilla Coperation[sic] supports Thunderbird by hosting many of the Thunderbird infrastructure and resources.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/thunderbird-faq#w_who-makes-thunderbird
Harvesting personal information while impersonating official electoral comms.
While they technically have the right authorisations on them, the envelope and postal vote form I received could easily be mistaken as official from anyone not paying 100% attention.
According to the article the websites both take all your information then redirect you to the actual postal voting registration, potentially leading voters to think they've already submitted for a postal vote when they haven't.
Is it a surprise that Australians don't trust politicians when the first piece of party communication they receive is a data harvesting form meant to deceive them?
Mozilla doesn't run Thunderbird
I really hope this doesn't impact the client too significantly. A substantial part of why I use Thunderbird is to keep out of these "ecosystems".
In essence keepass is an open database format and a bunch of different software tools have been written to interact with it. You can quite happily share the same keepass database between different software, e.g. synced between desktop and mobile
We import all sorts of fringe political positions from the US.
You might want to wait until after the May election to see whether Australia is immune to the rise of fascism.
In 2011 David Gonski proposed school funding reforms with one goal in mind: giving all children an equal shot at an education. Now, after 14 years of false starts, his model will finally be implemented.
It means every state is on track to hit the minimum funding levels recommended all those years ago.
But exactly when those levels will be reached, what was agreed to in order to land the deal and the other basic terms have not been released, leading to calls for greater transparency (more on that later).
You don't happen to know what whereabouts in legislation that's detailed, do you?
If it helps to relate it to something else, "you" also has plural grammar but can refer to a singular.
Tall poppies is about criticising people who are boastful and self-aggrandising, not mocking people for wearing clothes they like.
(Your link doesn't load for me so I don't know if it directly contradicts me, my statement is based on my local understanding with confirmation from Wikipedia)
Fully half of the sessions I've sat down to play It Takes Two (from the same studio) I've been straight up unable to play it, because the EA launcher has been too jank to actually launch games.
That's gone now thank god, but I still haven't finished It Takes Two solely because of EA bullshit.
Every character there is working class, so I'm imagining in this case "regardless of class" is implicitly "regardless of perceived class"
Are these not a fire risk? They look conceptually similar to brush fences, which are allegedly illegal near me due to fire risk.
I do use Voyager primarily, but is there a single FOSS app that remembers where you were in a comment thread when you go back into it? IMO that's Boost's killer feature, and literally the reason I ever used it.
Boost has a payment option. It's super cheap and one-time so it's not much of a hurdle. I use voyager now because Boost got weirdly inconsistent when loading lemmy images and videos, but I'd kill to have that UI and persistence back.
Building bridges without blue bubbles.
The GSM Association announced that the latest RCS standard includes E2EE based on the Messaging Layer Security (MLS) protocol, enabling interoperable encryption between different platform providers for the first time.
Tax Office whistleblower, Richard Boyle, stripped of any defence by broken whistleblower laws, has entered into plea deal negotiations.
Despite him blowing the whistle on the egregious use of power by the Tax Office with an understanding that he was protected, he wasn’t. He’s been caught out by inadequate laws that purported to shield him, but instead lured him into a situation where he and his family has suffered for seven years.
Honest Government Ads: 2025 Election
Click to view this content.
On Thursday 32 Bills passed in the Senate in an abrogation of the chamber's role of scrutiny - and in an attack on the democratic process.
The committee’s honourable mentions went to ‘right to disconnect’ and ‘rawdogging’
Even as we spent less, the Reserve Bank kept raising rates – and now household disposable income is back to what it was in 2015
Guardian Economist Greg Jericho shows - with interactive graphs - how the RBA's interest rate policies have missed the mark and depressed Australian living standards in an unprecedented way.
NACC under fire as Commissioner Paul Brereton found guilty of misconduct - Michael West
The National Anti-Corruption Commission Inspector has announced she will investigate the regulator’s refusal to investigate the Robodebt Six.
The National Anti-Corruption Commission Inspector has announced she has launched a formal investigation into the regulator’s refusal to investigate six public officials referred by the Royal Commission into Robodebt.
For anyone missing the significance, the Inspector announced "looking into" complaints about the NACC decision months ago, but this is the first time the word "investigation" has been used.
The distinction is important because once a formal “investigation” is commenced the NACC Inspector has additional powers, including the power to obtain documents.
NACC redacts from FOI docs name of deputy leader who chose not to investigate robodebt
The National Anti-Corruption Commission has scrubbed from official freedom of information documents the name of its deputy leader who made the “decision” to not investigate over Robodebt.
Title edited down from first paragraph
Original title: "GUESS WHO? The $600,000 question at the heart of Robodebt"
Kathryn Campbell defends her role in unlawful scheme and rejects claim she came up with program with former prime minister Scott Morrison
The decision underscores the importance of strengthening privacy laws and enforcement powers of regulators.
Documents reveal NACC Commissioner Brereton had a conflict of interest and recused himself from proceedings related to Robodebt. Or did he?
The decision by the National Anti-Corruption Commission not to investigate the six public servants over the Robodebt scandal appears to have been “infected by the bias of Commissioner Justice Paul Brereton and, if so, should now be disregarded”, says Stephen Charles AO KC, a former judge at the Victorian Court of Appeal and a former board member of the Centre of Public Integrity.
Operators not predicting a large influx of new customers right away, with patronage still well below pre-Covid levels
Investigation did not ‘identify sufficient admissible evidence’ the person intended to mislead, police say
Researcher wants legal assurances before releasing his Unfollow Everything tool.
Highlights:
Krishnan told Ars that "Meta is trying to have it both ways, but its assertion that Unfollow Everything 2.0 would violate its terms effectively concedes that Zuckerman faces what the company says he does not—a real threat of legal action."
For users wanting to take a break from endless scrolling, it could potentially meaningfully impact mental health—eliminating temptation to scroll content they did not choose to see, while allowing them to remain connected to their networks and still able to visit individual pages to access content they want to see.
According to Meta, its terms of use prohibit automated access to users' personal information not just by third parties but by individual users, as a means of protecting user privacy. Meta urged the court to reject Zuckerman's claim that Meta's terms violate California privacy laws by making it hard for users to control their data. Instead, Meta said the court should agree with a prior court that "rejected the argument
The Government playing word games with weapons to Israel - Michael West
Richard Marles and Penny Wong deny Australia is aiding Israel's slaughter of the Palestinians but their language is Orwellian
Foreign Minister Penny Wong was forced to concede that Australia was exporting parts into the F-35 global supply chain but then doubled down. She told ABC Insiders on 16 June: “We have F-35s… we are part of 18 nations who are part of that consortia. We are involved in non-lethal parts…”
The UN Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) makes no mention of the lethality of the individual parts or components that comprise the weapons (“conventional arms”) it covers.
The Arms Trade Treaty and the Geneva Conventions are clear on human rights responsibilities. Article 6.3 states that a nation-state should not authorise any transfer of conventional arms if it knows at the time that the items would be used in the commission of genocide, crimes against humanity, grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions of 1949, or other war crimes.
Much more in the article
Members in Leichhardt ‘express solidarity’ with the rebel senator and say they share her ‘strong support’ for Palestine
High exam hall ceilings are correlated with a lower exam score
In our new study we looked at the impact of ceiling heights on the exam performance of Australian university students.