Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

.

Don't expect straight answers on data sharing from the firms that profit from it

  • Written by The Conversation
imageEveryone wants to get their hands on it.cloud by Rawpixel/shutterstock.com

Data is a new currency of sorts: we all generate a lot of it, and many companies already use it to serve their ends or ours. But, for many very good reasons, it’s not easy to persuade people that they should give their data away. There are more than enough surveillance...

Read more

More Articles ...

  1. Jeremy Corbyn is the only candidate with a distinct arts policy
  2. Clubs and bars are closing but has anything really changed?
  3. Council tax reform is long overdue - so how do we do it?
  4. Young asylum seekers face lengthy legal battles to stay in Britain
  5. A simple daily pregnancy pill could boost population IQ and save the NHS money
  6. Indonesian cabinet reshuffle: experts respond
  7. Whether Mozart or Madonna, music can help you recover from surgery
  8. America's most lethal animal
  9. Big data algorithms can discriminate, and it's not clear what to do about it
  10. Compton commodified: NWA was always a blend of fiction and reality
  11. Better policies are needed to support local adoptions for children orphaned by Ebola
  12. Here's how rape on campus remains a hidden crime
  13. Your brief to the Paris UN climate talks: how we got here and what to watch for
  14. New UN rules put the spotlight on climate laggards to lift their game
  15. Now universities can accept as many students as they want, will there be a free-for-all in clearing?
  16. Why human head transplants are still a long way from becoming a reality
  17. Cities, cyborgs and social science: how will we live in the year 2065?
  18. Stop the wishful thinking: Obama's feeble power plan still isn't clean enough
  19. Tropical worms: they infect a third of the planet, so why aren't we doing more?
  20. Explainer: what is the dark web?
  21. Cabinet ministers brawl over same-sex marriage popular vote
  22. Stop bugging the bugs: the world as we know it would fall apart without them
  23. A polio-free world is in sight: what's needed to wipe out the last 1%
  24. Why south-south co-operation is a myth when it comes to BRICS and Africa
  25. More efficient cars will help meet our 2030 climate target, and save money
  26. Aussies are sports mad, but Victorians are the clear winners
  27. What's in a name? Online child abuse material is not 'pornography'
  28. Workplace reforms would hit workers outside unions hardest
  29. Don’t panic, the internet won’t rot children’s brains
  30. Don't panic, the internet won't rot children's brains
  31. Australia is lagging behind the world's best on judicial appointments reform
  32. Is Hockey right when he says we are over-reliant on personal income tax?
  33. Labor extends poll lead beyond 53-47
  34. Seventeen at Belvoir – a brilliant theatrical event with a happy, hetero ending
  35. Fans of a more open China should welcome the devalued yuan
  36. Inclusive education means all children are included in every way, not just in theory
  37. Tax or trade, the war on carbon pricing has been raging for decades
  38. Five things every guilty parent needs to know
  39. What really lies behind conservative opposition to same-sex marriage?
  40. The Great War brought us tragedy but it also birthed Australian science
  41. Forget Freud, research on dream imagery may help us understand consciousness
  42. Is David Beckham right to let his four-year-old daughter use a dummy?
  43. Police should put away the military gear and build connections with young people
  44. Explainer: why is China devaluing its currency?
  45. Uber could save families $10b per year - but it faces tax threats
  46. Low milk prices unearth the supply chain's dirty secrets
  47. Sinister moves to bar reporters as football clubs move media coverage in-house
  48. The Ashaninka of Peru: rescued from Shining Path militants, but still at risk
  49. Recording the entire nervous system in real time will unlock secrets of the brain
  50. Abbott no doubt is recalling Howard's playbook for the 1999 republic vote

Business News

Workplace Health Checks: A Smart Investment for Small Business Success

Running a small business means every team member counts and when poor health leads to absenteeism or low energy, productivity and profits take a hit. Lost workdays, rising healthcare costs, and staff ...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Rising Demand: Why Melbourne Needs More Electricians Now

Melbourne is running on change. Rooftops are filling with solar, carports are getting charge points, and older switchboards are being rebuilt so homes and shops can carry smarter, heavier loads. If yo...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

What Designers Really Think About Your Current Marketing Collateral

Key Takeaways: Designers notice structure, typography, and colour choices before the content itself Consistency across all collateral strengthens brand recognition and builds trust Overly bu...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

LayBy Deals