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Australia

Dispirited Australia: after losing the trust of the nation, can the Qantas brand bounce back? | qantas

“Give me back my slogan,” veteran broadcaster Phillip Adams says, after a somewhat sweary rant about Qantas.

The man who is now known as the voice of ABC radio’s Late Night Live was once an advertising guy, with a client who was one of the world’s oldest airlines.

“I got the account,” he says, “by proffering the ‘Spirit of Australia’ as a blood sacrifice.

“I suggested that it would be the perfect slogan, and at the time it was apposite. I had fond memories, going back to the evacuation of Darwin.”

The Queensland and Northern Territory Aerial Services – the world’s third oldest airline – has long held a special place in the hearts of Australians, thanks to its reputation for safety and efficiency, and the emotional appeal of its advertising over many years.

But within a few short months travelers have savagely turned on the airline as Qantas struggles with the legacy of the pandemic and the results of its corporate decision-making.

When Australia closed its borders to most travelers during Covid – including its own citizens in some cases – Qantas got rid of thousands of staff, including baggage handlers, and outsourced the work.

Now the news and social media are filled with horror stories from irate passengers whose bags have gone missing, who are stuck in eternal security queues, or who have been stranded when flights have been cancelled.

hey @Qantas you left like 50% of flight QF157 from Melbourne to Auckland’s luggage somewhere and I would love to know where my bag is or the status of it’s return? I’ve called the Menzies Aviation like you said to but it seems like the message bank is full…

— Maddy (@whatdoesmjewdo) June 12, 2022

@G_Parker our flight out of Broome was canceled Friday 15th July. Sat on the plane from 7pm to 11pm then we’re told to disembark, no accommodation offerings, qantas staff left and terminal was closed. 200+ people left to fend for themselves after 11pm at night.

— Chris Hinchliffe (@ChrisHinch77) July 26, 2022

In June, Qantas had the highest flight cancellation rate of any Australian airline and – along with its budget sibling Jetstar – the lowest rate of on-time arrivals and departures.

In Adelaide this week, security scanners were on the blink, and bags were wantonly swapped between lines. In Canberra, people were hustled to gates, then turned around and sat away.

For some it has been inconvenient and frustrating, but for others the problems at Qantas have had serious financial and career consequences.

The Melbourne metal band Thornhill set off on a 30-stop tour of the US earlier this month.

The band landed after a long flight from Perth via Sydney.

Their luggage didn’t.

Guitarist Matt van Duppen says at first it was just confusing, but confusion gave way to anger when Qantas didn’t help, until they went public on Twitter and television. They had to cancel shows, cop the financial hit, and leave their fans in the lurch as they tried to track down their kit.

“They lost all the gear,” Van Duppen says. “Our amps, our guitars, drum stuff, all our electronics, the stuff to power our ear monitors.

“No one on the phone could tell us where the bags were. We couldn’t play the first two shows, and we were very close to not playing the third.”

Van Duppen is in San Francisco when Guardian Australia talks to him. He’s sunny, but not sanguine.

The band lost income in show fees and merchandise sales, after already paying double the price for the latest trip compared to the last.

“Qantas dropped the ball,” he says. “It’s a kick in the guts.”

Qantas is far from the only player in the airline industry struggling in the current conditions, which include factors well beyond its control, such as the sky-high cost of jet fuel caused in part by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

But senior management, and above all the high-profile chief executive, Alan Joyce, have come in for savage criticism.

7.50am @qantas Melbourne Canberra flight leaves at 9.10am. What a surprise.
New Aussie slang for late flights & lost bags.
“Joyed”
“I’ll be late to the meeting my flight was Joyced”.
“I’ll need to buy some clothes- my bags got Joyced”.#auspol

— Dave Noonan (@DaveNoonanCFMEU) July 19, 2022

The head of the construction union, Dave Noonan, coined the term “Joyced”, for when things go wrong at Qantas, but he is far from alone in highlighting management’s responsibility.

Qantas picked up $2bn in taxpayer funds during Covid, and delivered first class bonuses to executives, while pilots and engineers are fighting for higher pay.

But regardless of exactly what has gone so wrong to trash the reputation of a national icon in such a short space of time, it faces an uphill battle to regain the trust of the Australian public. Can the Qantas brand be fixed?

‘There’s a lot of attachments’

Qantas has never been shy about trading on its history as an aviation pioneer in the outback, and its periodic contributions amid national crises.

Born in 1920, it initially ferried mail as well as people, and for a while operated as a flying doctor service.

By the second world war, it was moving supplies and troops, and evacuating people from danger zones.

In 1974, a Qantas Boeing 747 evacuated 674 people from Darwin in the wake of Cyclone Tracy, and in 2002 Qantas plans brought the wounded home after the Bali bombings.

The airline’s reputation for safety was cemented by the 1998 film Rain Man (famously never shown on Qantas flights), in which Dustin Hoffman’s character Raymond notes that “Qantas never crashed”.

The national airline inspired deep, patriotic, loyal devotion, which helps to explain the sense of hurt, even betrayal, in reaction to its recent troubles.

Because it’s Qantas. The Spirit of Australia. Qantas is choirs singing in the outback. It’s the Flying Kangaroo. It’s Kylie and Hugh and calling Australia home.

In the middle of 2021, when people were deeply exhausted by the pandemic but optimistic that some sort of end was in sight, Qantas put out a true-to-brand tearjerker advertisement.

There’ll be meetings and holidays and maskless hugs and overseas weddings, it promised, if everyone got vaccinated.

“I had a dream that I’d just fly away,” Tones and I crooned. “Someday we’ll all be together once more”, Qantas promised.

“There’s so much emotion,” Chris Baumann, an associate professor at Macquarie University, says.

“People remember Qantas from their childhood. There’s a lot of attachment.”

Baumann, an economist and course director of the university’s bachelor of marketing and media course, says there is a century of “brand equity” in Qantas.

That buildup of fondness and high expectations means that, when Qantas fails, it hits hard. Baumann says when people are flying Jetstar, they’re just happy to get a free coffee. But the bar is much higher with the national carrier. When it fails, they don’t just feel disappointed; they feel betrayed.

“With these issues with the luggage, with flights being canceled… passengers will be forgiving if it’s the weather,” he says.

“But if they think it’s at least in part due to mismanagement, they blame the brand that they know.”

That historical equity, he says, also means it will all even out.

“People are upset at the moment,” but have short-term memories, he says. “In six months they’ll book again.”

Sitting in @Qantas lounge in Melbourne now. Plans being delayed and canceled and temperatures are certainly peaking in here….not the best of months for the brand! #CustomerService

— Brad McMahon (@BradM_Optimum) July 21, 2022

Consumer psychologist Adam Ferrier – who has worked for Jetstar – agrees that the current woes are a “blip”.

“The amazing thing about strong brands is how little the short term matters,” he says.

Social media allows individual complaints to be elevated, then amplified by traditional media, he says, but that’s not reflective of the broader sentiment.

“There are years of emotional investment [in Qantas],” he says. “The current public relations issues Qantas is having are built off 100-plus years of being a really strong brand… this is a blip in the consumer psyche.”

Qantas apologized to travelers this week. In an interview on the Sydney radio station 2GB, senior manager Andrew David acknowledged the airline had let customers down.

“We are the national carrier – people have high expectations of us, we have high expectations of ourselves – and clearly over the last few months we have not been delivering what we did pre-Covid,” he said.

In a separate statement earlier this month, he said some criticism was fair, but some of the problems were global.

Restarting the airline after it was grounded by the pandemic was complex, he said. A tight labor market and rising Covid cases were the headwinds, not the baggage handler outsourcing. Qantas was now recruiting staff and cutting flights.

“Given Covid and flu will be ongoing, there will be a few more bumps along the way,” he said.

“But over the weeks and months ahead, flying will get back to being as smooth as it used to be.”

Phillip Adams wants his slogan back. Customers want their bags back.

Qantas wants its reputation back, and only time will tell where it will land.

Categories
US

We may never know who won the $1.3B Mega Millions jackpot

There’s a chance the identity of the winner of the $1.337 billion Mega Millions jackpot will never be known — thanks to an Illinois law allowing people who score more than $250,000 to keep their names secret.

The winning ticket to the mind-boggling fortune was sold at the Speedy Cafe Speedway gas station in Des Plaines, lottery officials have said.

No one has come forward yet to claim the massive prize — with lotto officials saying it’s not even clear whether the winner was an individual or pool.

Illinois is one of a few states that allow lotto winners the option of anonymity.

Some other states offer some form of lotto anonymity, including New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, South Carolina, Texas and Wyoming, according to a list compiled by Fox News.

But in New York, winners should expect to be required to attend a public announcement or press event, according to the state lottery’s website.

Person holding Mega Millions ticket and cash
While Illinois winners have the option of staying anonymous, New York lotto winners don’t have that luxury.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images

“The New York Lottery is a government agency and Lottery prizes are public funds, so we owe it to all our players to disclose the names of winners,” the site says.

Still, lotto anonymity has gained momentum in recent years, including in New York, where a proposal was passed the state legislature in 2019 before being vetoed by then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo.

Cuomo’s 2019 veto message advised winners who wish to try to keep their identity hidden to create an LLC to collect the winnings on their behalf.

The winner of the all-time high ticket — for $1.537 billion, purchased in South Carolina in 2018 — has yet to be revealed.

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Categories
Technology

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash

PlayStation division operating income has been nearly cut in half due to unfavorable market conditions and increased game development spending.

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 53 |  TweakTown.com

VIEW GALLERY – 10 PICTURES

Sony’s recent Fiscal Year Q1’22 results show sharp declines in its billion-dollar gaming segment and highlight the tumultuous market that could inhibit consistent growth. Games & Network Services, which includes the mighty PlayStation brand, saw substantial drops in both total sales revenues when converted from yen to USD based on foreign exchange market rates provided by the company.

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 4 |  TweakTown.com

According to the data, PlayStation net sales revenues dropped to $4.67 billion in Q1’22, a decline of $890 million or 17% year-over-year.

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 77 |  TweakTown.com

Operating income in Q1’22 was $408 million, representing a year-over-year drop of $52 million or 46%.

There’s multiple causes for these drops. Tough competition from the previous year is a big one. as we explained with Capcom’s results, which also dropped by 50%, Sony had set a high water mark in FY20 and FY21 due to coronavirus spending boons as consumers sheltered in place, alongside more favorable conversion rates. Consumers are also being hit with inflation and are apparently spending less money on–and in–video games.

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 30 |  TweakTown.com

Sony says that first-party and third-party game sales declined in Q1’22, as reflected by the hard data provided by the company. First-party games were down 4.1 million units, and third-party games were down 12.4 million units.

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 17 |  TweakTown.com

Microtransaction spending in PlayStation’s Add-Ons segment was also down by nearly half a billion dollars year-over-year. Add-Ons make the lion’s share of PlayStation revenues every quarter/year due to the sheer volume of microtransaction spending opportunities in heavy-hitting, mega-popular F2P games like Fortnite, Apex Legends, and Warzone.

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 20 |  TweakTown.comPlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 23 |  TweakTown.com

Revenue from video game sales and add-on content has also dropped 27% to $2.33 billion, but hardware sales are up 13% year-over-year to $1.04 billion, reflecting the strong adoption rate of the PlayStation 5 as well as Sony’s improved profit margins on each console sold.

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 19 |  TweakTown.com

Unfavorable exchange rates have primarily affected PlayStation’s USD conversions. Yen to USD exchange rates went from 109.5 in Q1’21 to a whopping 129.4 in Q1’22, representing 18% increase in USD value when compared to yen. The US dollar has more buying power in Japan during the comparative period.

Sony is also spending more money on games development and acquisitions. The company is readying a bunch of live games and wants to release 12 live service titles by 2025. It also recently purchased Haven, a new studio led by Assassin’s Creed vet Jade Raymond, and Bungie, the developer of Destiny and legacy Halo games.

Below we also have data on Sony’s growing Other segment, which includes PC game revenues, and Network Services, which includes PlayStation Plus.

PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 21 |  TweakTown.com
PlayStation operating income down nearly 50% on Q1 earnings crash 22 |  TweakTown.com

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Categories
Entertainment

Rita Ora embraces summer chic in a daffodil print corset as she visits the Louvre in Paris

Rita Ora embraces summer chic in a daffodil print corset as she visits the Louvre with her fiancé Taika Waititi during Paris getaway

She has been enjoying a sun-soaked getaway in Paris with her fiancé Taika Waititi.

And Rita Ora pulled off another chic ensemble on Friday as she headed to the Louvre in Paris with her director beau and his two daughters.

The singer, 31, put her best fashion foot forward as she showed off her perfectly bronzed and svelte figure in an ab-skimming daffodil print corset.

Gorgeous: Rita Ora pulled off yet another chic ensemble in a daffodil print corset as she headed to the Louvre in Pairs on Friday

Gorgeous: Rita Ora pulled off yet another chic ensemble in a daffodil print corset as she headed to the Louvre in Pairs on Friday

Rita looked every inch the style star as she sauntered through Rue de Rivoli wearing a pair of baggy beige trousers and a pair of tinted futuristic style sunglasses.

Slipping her feet into towering platform sandals, the blonde beauty carried her phone in one hand while she carried a silver handbag over her shoulder at the same time.

The Let Me Love You singer seemingly sported a natural make-up look with a perfectly contoured complexion and a stylish nude lip.

Rita accessorized the look with a selection of gold bangles as well as several pendant chains around her neck.

Beauty: The Let Me Love You singer seemingly sported a natural make-up look with a perfectly contoured complexion and a stylish nude lip

Beauty: The Let Me Love You singer seemingly sported a natural make-up look with a perfectly contoured complexion and a stylish nude lip

The hitmaker was accompanied by her fiancé Taika and his two daughters Matewa Kiritapu, six, and Te Hinekahu, 10, who formed an orderly queue into the world’s most-visited museum.

It comes after Rita proved she was a big kid at heart on Thursday as she enjoyed a fun day out at Disneyland Paris, documenting the trip in a plethora of snaps shared to her Instagram.

The actress flaunted her toned legs in a pair of Prada pink jacquard skort costing an eye-watering £1,390. A skort is a hybrid of a skirt and shorts.

Cute: On Thursday the Voice Australia host proved she was a big kid at heart as she enjoyed a fun day out at Disneyland Paris, documenting the trip in a plethora of snaps shared to her Instagram

Cute: On Thursday the Voice Australia host proved she was a big kid at heart as she enjoyed a fun day out at Disneyland Paris, documenting the trip in a plethora of snaps shared to her Instagram

Rita teamed the thigh-skimming bottoms with a multicolored top with a wavy pattern and a pair of bright blue trainers.

Finishing off her holiday look, the Body On Me hitmaker added red tinted sunglasses, white socks and a plethora of gold bangles and colored rings.

She allowed her curly blonde locks to cascade over her shoulders, while she added a further pop of color with pale pink lipstick.

oh hello!  She flaunted her toned legs in a pair of Prada pink jacquard skorts costing an eye-watering £1,390

Cheeky: Rita's eye-catching skorts perfectly hugged her curves

oh hello! She flaunted her toned legs in a pair of Prada pink jacquard skorts costing an eye-watering £1,390

In another image, Rita swapped her pink skorts with a pair of red and white polka dot shorts as she enjoyed a treat of candy floss.

With the star also sharing other pictures from her fun day out.

Captioning her post, Rita penned: ‘When In Disney, thank you @disneylandparis for everything I can’t believe the fireworks at the end. I actually believed. even though I didn’t understand it in French but you know I know let it go off by heart so.’

Fun times: She allowed her curly blonde locks to cascade over her shoulders, while she added a further pop of color with pale pink lipstick

Fun times: She allowed her curly blonde locks to cascade over her shoulders, while she added a further pop of color with pale pink lipstick

It comes as Rita once again flaunted her incredible figure on Wednesday as she slipped into a figure-hugging sheer patterned dress for sultry snaps shared to her Instagram Grid.

She added a few extra inches to her frame with a pair of black platform heels and accessorized with an array of chunky rings and black bangles.

It comes after it was reported that Rita’s partner Taika Waititi, 46, has moved into her London home.

The couple have been seen on numerous occasions in north London over recent weeks as they run errands and are reportedly making the house a home.

It is understood that Rita – who is working on several films – and Taika – who has recently finished Thor: Love and Thunder – hope to tie the knot once their work commitments have wrapped up.

Changing it up: In another image, Rita swapped her pink skort with a pair of red and white polka dot shorts as she enjoyed a treat of candy floss

Changing it up: In another image, Rita swapped her pink skort with a pair of red and white polka dot shorts as she enjoyed a treat of candy floss

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Categories
Sports

Max Verstappen wins, Daniel Ricciardo position, Ferrari strategy blunder, standings, points

World champion Max Verstappen fully exploited another Ferrari flop to pull 80 points clear of Charles Leclerc in this year’s title race with an emphatic Red Bull triumph in Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix.

Just a week after his crushing win at the French Grand Prix, where Leclerc crashed out of the lead, the 24-year-old Dutchman scored his first win at the Hungaroring, his eighth this year and the 28th of his career.

Starting from 10th on the grid, after engine problems in qualifying on Saturday required a new power unit, he sliced ​​through the field to finish 7.8 seconds ahead of Mercedes’ seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton and George Russell, who had started from his maiden pole position.

That was despite a 360 degree spin on lap 40 from which he managed to recover from.

Watch Every Practice, Qualifying & Race of the 2022 FIA Formula One World Championship™ Live on Kayo. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >

‘LET’S F***ING GO!’ Ricciardo nails insane double overtake before penalty drama strikes

“When we woke up this morning who would have thought we would win this race?” said the Dutchman.

With Russell on pole and Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz and Leclerc second and third on the grid, pre-race forecasts made the Italian team favorites to control and win with some ease as the Red Bulls were 10th and 11th.

But a combination of poor tire management, slow pit-stops and questionable strategy saw them finish fifth and sixth, behind Sergio Perez in the second Red Bull, who started 11th, after looking likely winners.

“I was hoping I could get close to a podium, but it was very tricky out there,” said Verstappen.

Max Verstappen is running away with the championship.
Max Verstappen is running away with the championship.Source: AFP

“But we had a really good strategy, we were really reactive, always pitting at the right time.” Hamilton, who started seventh was seeking to increase his record haul of eight Hungarian wins, registered his fifth consecutive podium and a successive second position.

“I was definitely struggling at the beginning, but bit by bit I got more comfortable with the balance,” he said.

“I had a really good start so I want to acknowledge my team. We’ve had a tough year and for both cars to be on the podium is an amazing way to go into the summer break.

“The other guys have an edge, but we are clearly closing the gap. Hopefully, we can bring some more into the second half of the season and start fighting with them.”

It was an up-and-down race for Daniel Ricciardo who executed a stunning double overtake on both Alpines and yelled “let’s f***ing go”, but had his race ruined after an incident with Lance Stroll.

Ricciardo made contact with the Aston Martin and was handed a five-second penalty for causing the collision. He also struggled with the harder tire and continued to slip down the field, eventually finishing in a lowly 15th position.

His teammate Lando Norris finished seventh.

– ‘I was confused’ –

Russell, who led for 30 laps, said he had a strong first stint, but that he struggled on the medium compound tires and lost temperature in the closing laps.

“But it’s been an amazing job by the team to have pole position and a double podium – we are definitely making progress. I am really proud of the work everyone has done.”

Both Sainz and Leclerc were disappointed by their results.

“I felt very strong and very comfortable on the mediums,” said Leclerc who led the race and looked likely to win before a pit-stop to switch unexpectedly to hard tyres.

“I wanted to stay out and I don’t know why I was called in. I was confused by that.

“I lost the race on the hard tires and I don’t know why. We need to speak about this inside the team.”

He added: “Honestly, the pace on my side, I was pretty happy, the only thing is that everybody will remember the last part of the race where it was a disaster for me, especially the hard – that’s why I lost the race basically .”

Sainz said he felt he was slower than expected.

“It is what it is,” he said. “We struggled as a team and in the lower temperatures the track changed and the car and the tires did not perform.

“We need to analyze this to see what we did wrong and, after the summer break, come back with a better package. We have to speak about it inside the team to get to do this better.” Ferrari team chief Mattia Binotto defended the team’s decisions.

“We didn’t have the performance we expected and the car was not performing well in the cooler conditions,” he said. “It’s the first time this season.

“We did not have the edge today. We believed we could do it, but it did not work out as we were expecting. Sometimes, we can make mistakes, but I fully support the team.”

HUNGARIAN GRAND PRIX RESULTS

1. Max Verstappen (NED/Red Bull) 1hr 39min 35.912sec

2. Lewis Hamilton (GBR/Mercedes) at 7.834sec

3. George Russell (GBR/Mercedes) 12,337

4. Carlos Sainz (ESP/Ferrari) 14,579

5. Sergio Perez (MEX/Red Bull) 15,688

6. Charles Leclerc (MON/Ferrari) 16,047

7. Lando Norris (GBR/McLaren-Mercedes) 1:18.300

8. Fernando Alonso (ESP/Alpine-Renault) 1 lap

9. Esteban Ocon (FRA/Alpine-Renault) 1 lap

10. Sebastian Vettel (GER/Aston Martin-Mercedes) 1 lap

11. Lance Stroll (CAN/Aston Martin-Mercedes) 1 lap

12. Pierre Gasly (FRA/AlphaTauri-Red Bull) 1 lap

13. Zhou Guanyu (CHN/Alfa Romeo) 1 lap

14. Mick Schumacher (GER/Haas-Ferrari) 1 lap

15. Daniel Ricciardo (AUS/McLaren-Mercedes) 1 lap

16. Kevin Magnussen (DEN/Haas-Ferrari) 1 lap

17. Alexander Albon (THA/Williams-Mercedes) 1 lap

18. Nicholas Latifi (CAN/Williams-Mercedes) 1 lap

19. Yuki Tsunoda (JPN/AlphaTauri-Red Bull) 2 laps

20. Valtteri Bottas (FIN/Alfa Romeo) 5 laps

Fastest lap: Lewis Hamilton (GBR/Mercedes) 1:21.386 on 57th lap (average speed: 260.580 km/h)

Did not finish: Valtteri Bottas (FIN/Alfa Romeo)

World championship standings (after 13 races)

drivers

1. Max Verstappen (NED) 258pts

2. Charles Leclerc (MON) 178

3. Sergio Perez (MEX) 173

4. George Russell (GBR) 158

5. Carlos Sainz (ESP) 156

6. Lewis Hamilton (GBR) 146

7. Lando Norris (GBR) 76

8. Esteban Ocon (FRA) 58

9. Valtteri Bottas (END) 46

10. Fernando Alonso (ESP) 41

11. Kevin Magnussen (DEN) 22

12. Daniel Ricciardo (AUS) 19

13. Pierre Gasly (FRA) 16

14. Sebastian Vettel (GER) 16

15. Mick Schumacher (GER) 12

16. Yuki Tsunoda (JPN) 11

17. Zhou Guanyu (CHN) 5

18. Lance Stroll (CAN) 4

19. Alexander Albon (THA) 3

20. Nicholas Latifi (CAN) 0

21. Nico Hulkenberg (GER) 0

builders

1. Red Bull 431pts

2.Ferrari 334

3.Mercedes 304

4.Alpine-Renault 99

5. McLaren-Mercedes 95

6.Alfa Romeo 51

7. Haas-Ferrari 34

8. AlphaTauri-Red Bull 27

9. Aston Martin-Mercedes 20

10. Williams-Mercedes 3

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Categories
Australia

Blockade Australia climate activist can’t use encrypted apps, must let police access phone

Since late June, Greg Rolles must produce on demand his computer and mobile phone for police inspection, and tell them his passwords.

He is not allowed to use any encrypted messaging apps, like Signal or WhatsApp. He can only have one mobile phone.

And there is a list of 38 people, many of whom are his friends, who he’s not allowed to associate with in any way — even, another activist found, liking a post on social media.

These are the strict technology-related bail conditions imposed on some Blockade Australia climate protesters—a development legal experts have criticized as “unusual” and “extreme”.

The climate action network was linked to a series of protests earlier this year, targeting ports and freight trains in New South Wales, and a property where activists were gathered was raided by police.

More than 30 people were arrested for unauthorized protests and disrupting traffic, among other charges, according to police statements.

In April, the NSW Parliament passed laws with steep fines and jail time for activities that “shut down major economic activity”, including protesting illegally on public roads, rail lines, tunnels, bridges and industrial estates.

a person is held while police officers place handcuffs on the person
A Blockade Australia protester is arrested by NSW Police. Eleven activists were arrested following action in Sydney on June 27.(Twitter: Blockade Australia)

Mr Rolles was arrested in late June, when he was pulled off the street in Sydney for allegedly blocking roads and obstructing traffic.

As soon as he was released under the bail conditions, he deleted Signal and lost many of his contacts. Because he ca n’t use WhatsApp, he said he can no longer communicate with people in Afghanistan for whom he was organizing assistance with his church.

The vagueness of the encryption ban is also a concern for him. As well as barring specific apps like Signal and Telegram, it states “the defendant is prohibited from possessing or having access to an encrypted communications device and/or possessing an encrypted application/media application”.

Large swathes of the internet are encrypted, which simply means that information is converted into code to protect it from unwanted access. Apps from online banking to streaming services are typically encrypted.

“Encryption is everywhere because it’s a fundamental part of keeping modern communications technology secure and functional,” a spokesperson for Electronic Frontiers Australia said.

“[That includes] essentially any modern device, including laptops, mobile phones, ATMs, TVs, PlayStations, and government websites such as myGov, Medicare, and Centrelink.”

Mr Rolles said he was worried the provision could be read in its most strict interpretation.

“I’m quite afraid of how that’ll be enforced.

“I definitely always have that kind of background anxiety — will the police just knock on my door?

“If a police officer was a bit annoyed at me, could they say, ‘you’ve been making phone calls, that’s encrypted’?”

Mr Rolles has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial.

Facebook ‘thumbs up’ lands activist in hot water

Defense lawyer Mark Davis, who is representing some of the Blockade Australia activists, said the vagueness of the prohibition was concerning.

“It used to name the things you couldn’t have, and then they made it all encrypted communication,” he said.

“It could be you’re on your PlayStation.”

He also takes issue with the non-association rules, and the lack of specificity about what an “association” might be.

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Categories
US

California’s McKinney fire and Montana’s Elmo fire explode in size : NPR

Angela Crawford walks past her home as the McKinney fire burns above it in Klamath National Forest, Calif., on Saturday.

Noah Berger/AP


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Noah Berger/AP


Angela Crawford walks past her home as the McKinney fire burns above it in Klamath National Forest, Calif., on Saturday.

Noah Berger/AP

YREKA, Calif. — Major wildfires in California and Montana grew substantially as firefighters protected remote communities on Sunday as hot, windy weather across the tinder-dry US West created the potential for even more spread.

The McKinney Fire was burning out of control in Northern California’s Klamath National Forest as erratic lightning storms swept through the region just south of the Oregon state line, said US Forest Service spokesperson Adrienne Freeman.

“The fuel beds are so dry and they can just erupt from that lightning,” she said. “These thunder cells come with gusty erratic winds that can blow fire in every direction.

The blaze exploded in size to more than 80 square miles (207 square km) just two days after erupting in a largely unpopulated area of ​​Siskiyou County, according to a Sunday incident report. The cause was under investigation.

A second, smaller fire just to the west that was sparked by dry lightning Saturday threatened the tiny town of Seiad, Freeman said. About 400 homes were under threat from the two California fires.

A deer swims across the Klamath River as flames burn the opposite bank in Klamath National Forest, Calif., on Saturday.

Noah Berger/AP


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A deer swims across the Klamath River as flames burn the opposite bank in Klamath National Forest, Calif., on Saturday.

Noah Berger/AP

In Montana, a blaze sparked in grasslands near the town of Elmo grew to more than 11 square miles (28 square km) after advancing into forest. Temperatures in western Montana could spike to 96 degrees (36 Celsius) by Sunday afternoon with strong winds, the National Weather Service said.

Roughly 200 miles (320 km) to the south, Idaho residents were under evacuation orders Saturday as the Moose Fire in the Salmon-Challis National Forest charred more than 67.5 square miles (174.8 square km) in timbered land near the town of Salmon. It was 17% contained Saturday.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency Saturday as the McKinney Fire intensified. The proclamation allows Newsom more flexibility to make emergency response and recovery effort decisions and access federal aid.

California law enforcement knocked on doors in the town of Yreka Fort Jones to urge residents to get out and safely evacuate their livestock onto trailers. Automated calls were being sent to land phone lines as well because there were areas without cell phone service.

A firetruck drives along California Highway 96 as the McKinney Fire burns on Saturday.

Noah Berger/AP


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Noah Berger/AP


A firetruck drives along California Highway 96 as the McKinney Fire burns on Saturday.

Noah Berger/AP

The Pacific Coast Trail Association urged hikers to get to the nearest town while the US Forest Service closed a 110-mile (177-km) section of the trail from the Etna Summit to the Mt. Ashland Campground in southern Oregon.

In western Montana, the wind-driven Elmo Fire forced evacuations of homes and livestock as it raced across grass and timber. The National Interagency Fire Center estimated it could take nearly a month to contain the blaze.

A portion of Highway 28 between Hot Springs and Elmo was shut down because of the thick smoke, according to the Montana Department of Transportation.

Categories
Technology

Mac sales down 10%, iPhones up 3% — Breaking down Apple’s quarterly numbers – TechCrunch

To get a roundup of TechCrunch’s biggest and most important stories delivered to your inbox every day at 3 pm PDT, subscribe here.

Good morning, you wonderful specimens of humanity! It’s Friday, and I’m writing this from the hammock in my sunny North Oakland garden, so life ain’t all that bad. (I can only assume that WFH stands for Work From Hammock).

This weekend, earmark a bit of time to apply to our Startup Battlefield 200. It gives you the chance to exhibit your startup for free at TechCrunch Disrupt in October and win the $100,000 prize. Applications close August 5, so get cracking!

Have a good one, and see you next week! — Haje

The TechCrunch Top 3

Startups and VCs

It’s all go, go, go in the world of insurance. Mary Ann reports that Lemonade acquired Metromile and promptly laid off about 20% of its staff. Makes sense, of course, in a world where there’s probably a fair amount of administrative and operational overlap between the two companies, but it’s always sad to say goodbye to beloved colleagues.

And don’t miss Aria‘s piece about how the Exploration Company is developing a brand-new reusable orbital spacecraft. “The [space] exploration ecosystem is going to change dramatically in the probably next 10 to 15 years,” co-founder and CEO Hélène Huby explained. “If you make it happen, you have a huge advantage of being one of the first in the market.”

A few more nuggets to take you into the weekend:

  • Taking the fun out of everything: A startup is charging $1.99 to write strings to feed into platforms like DALL-E, and I despair for humanity. Come on, that’s half the fun! No thanks at all to Kyle for making me see the confused anger this afternoon. jerk.
  • Making it rain down in Africa: Zedcrest Capital, a firm known for its debt and equity capital markets investments but who recently started dabbling in venture investments, has launched a $10 million “emergency fund” for African startups, aimed at pre-Series A stage companies, Tag reports.
  • Driving lessons for industrial vehicles: Polymath Robotics launches to bring plug-and-play software autonomy to any industrial vehicle, Kirsten reports.
  • The more you learn: You know what, I’ve never read one of Devin’s articles that didn’t make me go, “Huh! I didn’t know that!” Today, Shinkei Systems’ AI-guided fish harvesting robot gave me that moment of delight.

All my apes gone: Legal disputes at the intersection of IP and NFTs

Missing bored apes illustration;  IP law and NFTs

Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch

When Andy Warhol appropriated images of Campbell’s Soup in 1962, he was lucky: For a host of reasons, the company decided not to sue him for infringing its trademark.

One wonders how the situation would have played out 60 years later if Warhol had minted a series of NFTs with the iconic soup labels, however.

In her latest TC+ post, CORPlaw founder Kristen Corpion examined “the most interesting and important IP legal issues that are currently impacting the creation, transfer and use of NFTs,” including trademark infringement, the first sale doctrine and why Seth Green ended up paying a $100,000 premium to buy back his stolen Bored Ape.

(TechCrunch+ is our membership program, which helps founders and startup teams get ahead. You can sign up here.)

Big Tech Inc.

It’s never gonna give you up. It’ll make an effort to never let you down. It probably won’t run around and desert you. But TikTok may be considering a music service, report Aisha and Ivan in an article that unfortunately falls short of the mandatory quota of musical puns. Don’t worry folks, I’ll talk to her about it.

Meanwhile, annie reports that Kenya is contemplating giving Facebook a smack with the ban-hammer, after the country’s National Cohesion and Integration Commission finds that the social media platform isn’t doing enough to clear out hate speech.

  • Is media coming to Twitter?: Looks like the social media platform is testing letting you post images, videos, and GIFs all in the same tweet, Ivan reports.
  • We don’t want your steenking ads: Roku misses the mark on its quarterly results, and blames advertising slowdown for coming up short, Lauren reports.
  • Bank balance goes down, shares go up: Amazon reported its earnings and ran at a $2 billion loss. Seems like stonks love that sort of thing, because the share price went up, reports Lauren.
  • For you, special price. For you, it’s double: Twitter Blue gets a price hike from $2.99 ​​to $4.99 per month, reports Ivan.
  • Where do you take someone after a “peekaboo” accident? To ICU: Instagram pretty much copied BeReal for its Dual camera feature, but kinda missed the point along the way, Amanda explains.
  • Is there anything they can’t do?: Video memes, maybe music soon (see above) and now TikTok begins testing HTML5 minigames with a handful of partners, sarah reports.

Categories
Entertainment

Doctor Who’s David Tennant, Russell T. Davies And More Pay Tribute After Companion Bernard Cribbins’ Death

Sad news hit the world of Doctor Who this morning, as it was announced Bernard Cribbins, the actor who played popular companion Wilfred “Wilf” Mott, is dead at the age of 93. After the news broke, several prominent people associated with the series, including David Tennant and Russell T. Davies shared their fondest memories in tribute to the man’s career.

Working with Cribbins several times throughout his span as the 10th Doctor, David Tennant got to share the screen with the British entertainment legend from time to time. Most notably, Wilfred Mott was the featured companion in Tennant’s heartbreaking Doctor Who two part finale, “The End of Time.” In a short, but respectful statement, David Tennant was reported to have reacted on social media (via The Mirror) as follows:

Sad news that Bernard Cribbins has passed away.

Categories
Sports

‘That’s not normal’: Van Vleuten tears up the GC on the Tour’s first mountain stage

The GC race had barely begun before stage 7. Marianne Vos (Jumbo-Visma) was sitting in yellow on borrowed time before the mountains with the GC favorites dotted around the top 10. Just 2:34 separated Vos in first and Elise Chabbey (Canyon -SRAM) in 10th.

After Annemiek van Vleuten (Movistar) had her way in the Vosges Mountains, however, the GC was torn to pieces.

The 39-year-old’s 60 km-long assault on the GC race sees her leading by 3:14 ahead of her nearest rival, Demi Vollering (SD Worx0, who valiantly stuck with her compatriot until she could no longer match her pace on the climbs.

“That’s not normal,” Vollering said of Van Vleuten’s performance. “I said to her it’s not normal what you did. She said, I have so much more training experience and experience overall. She said to me that it will come to me, so let’s hope.”

Vollering stayed away on her own ahead of a chasing group of favorites to finish 5:16 ahead of Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig (FDJ Suez Futuroscope) who took third place on the stage. Vollering’s ride puts her at a 1:19 advantage over Kasia Niewiadoma (Canyon-SRAM) who started the day in second place.

“It was brutal to be honest,” said Niewiadoma after the stage. “There was seriously no time to recover, no time to do anything, because we started with a lot of attacks from different teams. So the pace was quite high. And then of course, we get the first climb. And it was still just crazy.

“For me personally, I knew that after the second climb, there was a long descent on the big road and the part in the valley was something that you would definitely benefit from when having riders around too. So when I saw [Elisa] Longo Borghini going on her own I knew that it would be a difficult day for her.

“And then on the last climb I just gave my best because I knew that the GC spot or the top three is available for me, especially the third place so basically I rode for that.”

Longo Borghini’s solo efforts meant that she struggled on the final climb after eventually being caught by the group containing Niewiadoma, Juliette Labous (DSM), Uttrup Ludwig, Evita Muzic (FDJ Suez Futuroscope), Urška Žigart (BikeExchange-Jayco), and Silvia Persico (Valcar Travel & Service). The Italian eventually crossed the line 7:23 behind Van Vleuten and 2:07 behind Uttrup Ludwig putting her in seven on GC at 6:15.

“I’m completely exhausted,” Longo Borghini said after the stage. “I’ve been alone for a long time. For me, what really killed me was the valley. I gave my best and that’s it. In the end if you give your best it’s all you can do, and I really did it.

“We all knew that she [Van Vleuten] was the strongest and I didn’t believe for one second that she was not good.

“For me I was rockclimbing the last climb, but what can I say? It’s bike racing.”

Uttrup Ludwig’s third place on the stage has moved the Danish rider up to fifth overall at 5:59. Despite climbing up the GC the 26-year-old seemed uncharacteristically deflated after the stage.

“I just gave it my all,” she said. “I guess then you should be satisfied. I didn’t have much more to give. They were just stronger today,” she said. “I did everything that I could, and I think the rest also. She [Van Vleuten] was just stronger.”

Labous, who finished fourth on the stage after a three-up sprint with Niewiadoma and Uttrup Ludwig has climbed to fourth overall at 5:22 while Muzic, who was in the same group going into the final climb, has entered the top 10 and sits in eighth with a deficit of 10:13 on Van Vleuten.

Italian multidisciplinary rider Silvia Persico beat Longo Borghini in a sprint over the line to come sixth on the stage but still lost time to move into sixth overall at 6:11 back. An in-the-wars Mavi Garcia (UAE Team ADQ) managed to pull up after an unfortunate few stages of crashing to ride to 13th on the stage which propelled her back into the top 10. She sits in ninth place overall, 12:06 behind Van Vleuten.

One of the day’s big GC losers was Vollering’s teammate, Ashleigh Moolman Pasio. Usually one of the peloton’s strongest climbers, the South African could only manage 18th on the stage, 13:43: behind Van Vleuten, dropping to 12th overall.

“I’ve had a bit of a runny nose and stuff but I thought it was just allergies, but my whole body was just aching today,” Moolman Pasio said. “I don’t know, empty today. It’s crazy how you can go from feeling so good to feeling so shit just overnight. But yeah, a really good performance from Demi so we can be happy with that.”

One of the revelations of the day was Žigart who, after a relatively quiet race, spent the day in a group of the peloton’s best climbers. The 25-year-old Slovenian finished the stage in eighth place but is over 30 minutes in arrears on GC.

“It was full gas from the start,” she said. “Already when the big break went. Actually when the platoon split. And then full gas into the full climb. Everybody knew that they had to make a difference as soon as possible and then it’s everybody on their own.

“I wasn’t there – I didn’t see it [Van Vleuten’s move]. I was a little bit stuck and out of position. I had to climb my way back to the group of favourites. We were unlucky to have Kristen [Faulkner] back but I couldn’t push, I couldn’t work in the group. Of course I was a little sad. I felt a bit stupid.

“I felt good [on the day]. I showed the world that I have the climbing legs. Hopefully in the future I can be further up.”

The GC podium seems all but secured with one stage to go, however in the words of Niewiadoma: “you never know what can happen. Bike racing is unpredictable.”