Hi John, As it did in March, the British government is again trying to lay the blame on encryption in the wake of the terrorist attack in Manchester. This time, social media is also in its sights.
Google has argued that it would cost too much and take up too much time to obtain data on what it pays its female staff, after US Department of Labour lawyers sought salary records in federal court in a case where the search behemoth is accused of underpaying women on its rolls. WikiLeaks appears to have gone missing, with what has become more or less a regular release from its Vault 7 CIA document dump not being made on 26 May. Telstra is facilitating Fox Sports’ outside broadcasts through its distributed production network under a long-term deal inked by the two companies. Machine learning will be the next competitive frontier in 10 years and having good machine learning models, that perform the best, will be the competitive advantage that will differentiate between the winners and losers, a senior executive at the data management company MapR says. The US has again floated the idea of banning passengers from carrying anything larger than a smartphone into the cabin of an airplane. Australian counter-drone company Department 13 has sold its Mesmer solution to a South East Asian customer as part of a strategy by the Asian organisation designed to secure its airspace. And of course, there's plenty more so for all the news visit www.itwire.com. Have a great day! Stan Beer, Editor in Chief, iTWire ADVERTISE IN THIS NEWSLETTER & iTWire.com Contact: andrew.matler@itwire.com 0412 390 000
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