How Labor will fix NBN technical woes
Cabling issues, internet access, affordability and an economic review were some of the top line points for Shadow communications minister, Michelle Rowland.
Cabling issues, internet access, affordability and an economic review were some of the top line points for Shadow communications minister, Michelle Rowland.
Legislation that will see social media companies and executives face hefty fines with jail time for failing quickly remove violent content from their platforms.
The encryption bill, intended to help police and national security agencies intercept online communications, could turn Australian companies ‘into Huaweis’, technology chiefs have warned.
If the proposal goes ahead it will lay bare those companies that have the highest gender pay gaps and fewest women in leadership positions.
The Australian Labor Party has promised to introduce an ‘NBN Service Guarantee’ if they win the next federal election.
NBN Co’s move to pause its HFC network rollout to fix service issues could cost up to $790 million, according to the Australian Labor Party.
Chief information officer of the Northern Territory Department of Education, Satpinder Daroch is leaving the organisation after nine years.
The leaders of Australia’s political parties will be briefed by experts from the Australian Signals Directorate on the cyber security threat to the democratic process.
Several big multinational technology companies paid no tax in Australia during the 2014-15 financial year, the Australian Tax Office’s annual corporate tax transparency report has revealed.
Senator Stephen Conroy has announced his resignation from parliament in a speech tabled last night that named the NBN has his ‘greatest contribution’.
In the battle for the City of Sydney, one party is hoping to attract votes by promising free city-wide Wi-Fi, an app to get you home safely after a night out and open sourcing the city’s data.
Government talk about agility and innovation is quite worrying for some Australians, and only 50 per cent of businesses are ‘innovative active’, Labor’s Kim Carr told the National Press Club on Monday.
Labor has promised that it would roll out fibre-to-the-premises to up to two million additional homes and businesses, and phase out the government’s fibre-to-the-node NBN under a broadband policy announced on Monday.
The Federal Opposition has proposed new policies encouraging more investment in startups, and to spread innovation support across Australia and overseas.
NBN has unveiled an ambitious three-year construction plan to connect the national broadband network to 9.5 million premises by September 2018.