b

Canberra's north-south divided over internet surfing and the NBN

It's another front in the long-running rivalry beneath north and south in the nation's capital.




b

Why we need to stop car crash 'women in tech' panels and actually break the glass ceiling

Women in tech panels seldom have anything to offer besides fortune-cookie wisdom and repackaged logic.




b

Australians are avoiding cash-only businesses: survey

As internet banking and tap-and-go cards become ubiquitous, Australians are beginning to reject businesses that operate on a cash only basis.




b

Sydney start-up Suppertime acquired by food delivery giant

Australian premium restaurant delivery service Suppertime has been snapped by a major international company, as the local food delivery market continues to heat up.




b

The real reason St George Bank, Bank of Melbourne and BankSA are suffering a long outage

It was meant to be a simple task: turn the computer off and on again while performing scheduled maintenance.




b

St George, Bank of Melbourne and BankSA outage to be fixed on Monday night, St George says

St George, Bank of Melbourne and BankSA customers begin to regain access to their accounts after a system outage.




b

Bank of Melbourne, St George, BankSA internet banking services back online

Bank of Melbourne, St George and and BankSA customers should now be able to access their money online, but those still locked out of the system are advised to try the old remedy of switching their banking apps on and off again.




b

From making scarves to building a $165 million tech start-up: Canva's Melanie Perkins

To say it has been a wild ride for Canva founder and CEO Melanie Perkins would be an understatement.




b

Digital Transformation Office chief executive Paul Shetler announces public service work schedule

Paul Shetler reveals the digital projects about to hit the federal bureaucracy. Starting with Canberra.




b

How Australian public service's digital reforms will happen, according to the Digital Transformation Office

The millions of customers, the short deadline: how the public service's digital revolution will start.




b

What it's like to be Australia's top tech talent

They're highly mobile, highly sought after, and tend to "upskill" off their own bat. The ball is most definitely in their court.




b

Cyber security expert issues dire warning over vulnerability of key infrastructure

Data theft and cybercrime is a major source of funding for Islamic State which is likely to have secretly planted insiders "around the world" in positions where critical data could be extracted and exploited, a leading cyber security expert has warned.




b

Centrelink blocks 60,000 calls a day, blames smartphone apps

Centrelink blocked 22m phone calls last year, with smartphone apps blamed for inflating the figures.




b

Cyber thieves target tax time

Tens of thousands of taxpayers forced to wait for refunds amid suspicion of identity theft.




b

Public service to ban paper in boxes: New digital policy to make sweeping reforms across APS

One powerful agency head warns against "tyranny of small person" as sweeping reforms released for public service.




b

Australian public service's 'gap in capability' to deal with digital revolution

State of the Service report outlines the major hurdle to digital reform.




b

Five hundred tax file numbers hacked every day

Identity thieves can now get into employers' payroll systems, but ATO says it's systems are safe.




b

Australian companies targeted by identity thieves for tax frauds

Australian companies are having their identities hijacked by international criminals who use them to try to defraud the Australian Taxation Office.




b

Open government data to public use, and Australia may start to catch up with the world

Public servants need to ditch the control and encourage entrepreneurship.




b

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews announces 175 new tech jobs for Melbourne

State government commits to five-year funding round as software company launches community centre and new jobs.




b

From AFL star to Big Apple start-up, Swift's Joel MacDonald is kicking goals

Two years ago Joel MacDonald was in Melbourne playing in the AFL; now he's kicking goals in New York.




b

Australia vulnerable to a cyber-attack disaster

Australian government agencies and organisations are increasingly vulnerable to a major cyber attack yet security has not evolved in more than 20 years, according to an international cybercrime expert.




b

Taxpayer records exposed by serious ATO, myGov security flaw

Taxpayer says he was hung up on twice by call centre staff when trying to report the issue.




b

New website allows youth to report cyber bullying at ACT libraries

A new pilot website will also make it easier for material to be taken off the internet.




b

Bureau of Meteorology computers breached, ABC reports

Australia's Bureau of Meteorology has reportedly had its computer systems breached.




b

Delayed Australian data breach notification bill lands

Australians will be informed of certain breaches of their personal information under new laws being proposed by the Turnbull government, but only if the company or organisation breached turns over $3 million in revenue a year.




b

Australian public service failing to share information: Public Sector Data Management report

A report has revealed stunning examples of public service inefficiency when it comes to releasing and managing data.




b

Pro sport and big data: coaches may be more in favour than athletes

Professional sport is still working out how to tackle big data and understand how technology can assist elite athletes, according to top-level sports sports officials in the United States.




b

Centrelink apologises for web welfare shutdown

Centrelink clients around Australia are furious over missing payments.




b

Centrelink's IT meltdown hits the disability pension

Centrelink's tech woes disrupts Disability Pension medical crackdown.




b

The big business of hackathons

Hackathons have turned into million-dollar businesses of their own, as corporates scramble for the attention of the industry's best developer talent.




b

ACT Health bogged down by outdated faxes

Archaic technology wasting time for Canberrans is in the target of new federal agency.




b

Centrelink wrongly hits 70,000 families with bills for up to $726

Computer glitch blamed as welfare agency hits tens of thousands with bills for money that is not owed.




b

Telstra privacy breach leaves customer's voicemail exposed

Richard Thornton did a factory reset on his second-hand iPhone 5, but the buyer kept receiving his voicemail.




b

Troubled myGov website to be taken from Human Services and given to Digital Transformation Office for streamlining

Malcolm Turnbull's DTO has been critical of myGov, now it has the chance to show it can do better.




b

ACT government defends seeking access to Canberrans' metadata

The ACT government has defended its right to seek access to Canberrans' private phone and internet records without a warrant.




b

Remembering the failed Aussie start-ups of yesteryear

Failed start-ups are a dime a dozen. But you wouldn't know it from the Australian market which, unlike that of our American cousins, prefers to hide its failures and slink quietly into that good night instead of exploring the lessons gleaned from failure.




b

Ricochet uses power of the dark web to help journalists, sources dodge metadata laws

A new internet messaging tool that sidesteps the federal government's metadata collection regime to help journalists protect whistle blowers and assists human rights activists has received a tick of approval from security experts.




b

MyGov to feel the audit blowtorch

Human Service to face National Audit Office scrutiny. Again.




b

Apple v FBI: what the fight is about and why you should care

Apple is in the middle of a legal fight with the FBI over creating a 'back door' to unlock a terrorist's iPhone.




b

Government acknowledges poor internet in Canberra's south but sticks to NBN plan

Minister for Communications acknowledges some areas of Canberra's southern suburbs have poor internet access.




b

Branching out after death: where next for the 'Internet of Things'?

It turns out that even death needs the internet.




b

Slack's secret sauce: how it became the fastest growing business app ever

Slack has launched its Asia-Pacific headquarters in Melbourne. We caught up with Ali Rayl, head of customer experience.




b

Recruitment drive for cyber security specialists will bring challenges for government

Fear government's cyber security recruitment drive will lead to job cuts.




b

Malcolm Turnbull promises $50 million reboot for troubled myGov

Takeover of troubled portal by Digital Transformation Office confirmed




b

Government agencies name cybercrime as their top fraud risk: PwC

The 'typical' corrupt bureaucrat is a male, university-educated middle manager, aged 41 to 50.




b

Governments should hack less, deliver better online services: Harvard IT expert

Western governments have established the international norm of online hacking and should not be surprised when foreign governments do the same.




b

Digital public service means ditching control and embracing 'we'

Collaborating with the public is the key for a more engaging government experience.




b

Call for a cyber security reserve corps to help fight major attacks

Experienced volunteers would help fight major online threats to governments, private industry and civil institutions.




b

Centrelink apologises for new privacy breach

Rookie email error shares hundred of email addresses – twice.