Worthwhile reading ..

Australian Computer Society Information Age

> From: Information Age <[email protected]>;
> Date: 21/12/2021
> https://ia.acs.org.au/category/analysis.html

A word from the Editor

Let this be a lesson to anyone who works in a regulated industry, especially 
finance. JP Morgan Chase has been fined a staggering $280m after employees were 
found to be conducting official business via WhatsApp. Why is that a problem? 
Because it puts those conversations out of view of the regulators, which is 
against the law. Take note.

The eSafety Commissioner has been handed some pretty cool superpowers – from 
early next year, they can order the likes of Google to delete links to 
offending content. They can ask internet services to remove or restrict 
content, and have stores delete apps. Their powers now have global reach, and 
they can impose penalties of up to $550,000 for failure to comply.

In other news, Australia has a new national AI centre; Tech Council to work 
closely with ACS; an ethical AI institute has been launched by the expert 
reportedly fired by Google; Big Tech faces a raft of new regulations in the EU; 
and ACS announces the finalists in its annual Digital Disruptor Awards. Did you 
make the cut?

We’ll see you Thursday for our final edition of Information Age for 2021.

Roulla Yiacoumi
and the Information Age team


_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to