NewsBite

Tech crackdown

Advertisement
The US government has told a Federal judge it should break up Google and make it sell its Chrome web browser.

US government pushes to break up Google to fix search monopoly

The US Justice Department has asked a federal court to force Google to sell Chrome, its popular web browser – a move that could reshape competition on the internet.

  • David McCabe

Latest

What Google Search looked like at launch, in 1998.

Are we ready for an internet with no Google search?

Twenty-five years ago, Google’s minimalist search engine was a revelation. What would happen if the US government moved to break up its dominance?

  • David Swan
Meta’s privacy policy director Melinda Claybaugh in 2023.

Meta admits Australians cannot opt out of ‘predatory’ AI data scrape

Senators are calling for stronger privacy laws to give Facebook users the ability to block the company from using their posts to train its AI models, as users can in the EU.

  • David Swan
Major tech companies face fines of almost $800,000 a day if they don’t front up over efforts to combat online abuse.

Government hammers big tech with barrage of new laws

Albanese has vowed to protect Australian sovereignty, while others in the government confirmed the plans for reforms on copyright, payments, content and online safety.

  • David Crowe and Paul Sakkal
X owner Elon Musk has had a win in the Australian courts.

‘Dark patterns’: European Commission is ticked off by Elon Musk’s X, again

The European Commission sees evidence of “motivated malicious actors” using X’s blue ticks to deceive users. Musk fires back, claiming that the EC offered his company “an illegal secret deal”.

  • Stephen Bartholomeusz
Yintao “Roger” Yu described a special committee of the Chinese government installed at the company’s Beijing offices that he said monitored all data on the platform

Trump just shook up America’s war on TikTok

If there’s one thing that unites an otherwise bitterly divided Washington, it’s China. But Donald Trump has just stirred the pot.

  • Stephen Bartholomeusz
Advertisement
Apple, Meta, Microsoft

How social media giants created a ‘paedophile paradise’

Australia used new laws to gain a world-first insight into how social media giants respond to child abuse material – and found a culture of “wilful blindness”

  • Jordan Baker
The media bargaining code has delivered millions of dollars in funding to local media organisations.

TikTok, YouTube could be targeted under Australia’s media code

The federal government is considering whether it should use landmark laws to force tech platforms such as YouTube and TikTok to negotiate with news outlets.

  • Zoe Samios and Nick Bonyhady
Chinese-born Canadian citizen Xiao Jianhua.

Chinese-Canadian tycoon Xiao Jianhua jailed for 13 years, fined $11.7 billion

The imprisonment of Xiao Jianhua brings to an end a long-running saga that has seen many of the tycoon’s business interests reined in since he was seized in Hong Kong more than five years ago.

  • Bloomberg News
For Xi Jinping , Vladimir Putin’s invasion will have been seen as a way of testing Western resolve, a useful war-gaming of his own designs played out at someone else’s expense.

Xi Jinping’s year of triumph has been derailed by turmoil

This wasn’t the 2022 that Xi Jinping had in mind.

  • Stephen Bartholomeusz

Original URL: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/topic/tech-crackdown--1n3q