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Australian Facebook users to share $50m payment after privacy scandal

Australian Facebook users to share $50m payment after privacy scandal

Meta has agreed to a record settlement with Australia’s information commissioner, ending years of legal proceedings over Facebook’s infamous Cambridge Analytica scandal.

  • by David Swan

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The Australian company that wants to help one million people a day
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Start-ups

The Australian company that wants to help one million people a day

One of the hottest health technology start-ups in Australia has hosed down concerns about how patient data is treated to train its AI platform.

  • by David Swan
Why Victoria’s privacy chief is so worried about facial-recognition technology

Why Victoria’s privacy chief is so worried about facial-recognition technology

Gaming venues and retail are increasingly using off-the-shelf facial-recognition software, sparking high-level concern about potential risks of privacy and data security breaches.

  • by Kieran Rooney and Carla Jaeger
The Liberal MPs threatening to vote against Dutton on teen ban
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Social media

The Liberal MPs threatening to vote against Dutton on teen ban

Peter Dutton and Anthony Albanese both want to pass a law banning children under 16 from social media, but there are misgivings in the Coalition party room.

  • by Paul Sakkal
Bunnings keen to roll out facial recognition tech to all its stores
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Hardware

Bunnings keen to roll out facial recognition tech to all its stores

The retailer remains defiant and determined to use the tech despite the privacy commissioner saying it breaches Australia’s privacy laws.

  • by David Swan
Huge fines planned for tech giants that let kids on apps

Huge fines planned for tech giants that let kids on apps

As it moves to tamp down concerns about handing over IDs, the Albanese government will on Thursday put forward a world-first bill to block younger teens from social media.

  • by Paul Sakkal
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Bunnings defends use of facial recognition after privacy breach
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Retail

Bunnings defends use of facial recognition after privacy breach

The retailer says its use of the technology appropriately balanced privacy with the need to protect staff against violent and organised crime.

  • by David Swan and Jessica Yun
King tried to stop Prince Harry suing Murdoch publisher, court hears

King tried to stop Prince Harry suing Murdoch publisher, court hears

Harry previously alleged that Buckingham Palace had a “secret agreement” with Rupert Murdoch’s newspaper group.

  • by Victoria Ward
Facebook fights celebrity scams with facial recognition
Analysis
Scams

Facebook fights celebrity scams with facial recognition

Four years after shutting its facial recognition function down over privacy concerns, the tech giant is bringing it back to rein in celeb-bait scams. Here’s how.

  • by Tim Biggs
Smartphones have robbed teenagers of freedom. No law will change that

Smartphones have robbed teenagers of freedom. No law will change that

Social media and smartphone technology make it very difficult to convince adolescents that true freedom lies in privacy, in anonymity, in no one knowing what you’re up to.

  • by Jacqueline Maley
Meghan Markle, Hugh Grant and new Australian laws

Meghan Markle, Hugh Grant and new Australian laws

Celebrities and royals helped shape UK privacy law. New laws will allow Australians to sue over serious privacy invasions, but with major differences.

  • by Michaela Whitbourn

Original URL: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/topic/privacy-60r