Tag: World

  • King Charles will not appear on the new Australia $5 note

    King Charles will not appear on the new Australia $5 note

    King Charles III will not feature on Australia’s new five dollar note, the country’s central bank has announced.

    The new design will pay tribute to “the culture and history” of Indigenous Australians, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) says.

    A portrait of the late Queen Elizabeth II appears on the current design of the five-dollar note.

    The Queen’s death last year reignited debates about Australia’s future as a constitutional monarchy.

    “This decision by the Reserve Bank Board follows consultation with the Australian government, which supports this change,” the bank said in a statement.

    “The Bank will consult with First Australians in designing the $5 banknote. The new banknote will take a number of years to be designed and printed. In the meantime, the current $5 banknote will continue to be issued. It will be able to be used even after the new banknote is issued,” it added.

    The A$5 banknote is the only Australian banknote to carry the image of a British monarch. The late Queen appears on the country’s coins as well, although Australia is transitioning to using an effigy of King Charles III.

    The RBA told the BBC it has not yet set a date for when it will reveal the new five-dollar note design.

    The decision was welcomed by Aboriginal politicians and community leaders.

    “This is a massive win for the grassroots, First Nations people who have been fighting to decolonize this country,” said Lidia Thorpe, a Greens senator and DjabWurrung Gunnai Gunditjmara woman.

    First Nations people lived in Australia for at least 65,000 years before British colonization, according to recent estimates.

    The King became the British monarch after his mother’s death in September.

    As the British monarch, he is also the head of state of Australia, New Zealand, and 12 other Commonwealth realms outside the United Kingdom. The role is largely ceremonial.

    The British monarch’s portrait has appeared on at least one design in every series of Australian banknotes.

    However, in September Australia said the image of the new monarch would not automatically replace the Queen on its five-dollar notes, and that she might be replaced by Australian figures.

  • How worker surveillance is backfiring on employers

    How worker surveillance is backfiring on employers

    Before the pandemic, Mark had a lot of autonomy in his job in the IT department of a US industrial firm. He and his teammates were able to get their work done, he says, “without our manager doing much, you know, managing”

    That changed abruptly when the company transitioned to working from home. “The monitoring started on day one,” says Mark, whose surname is being withheld for career concerns. The company began using software that enabled remote control of employees’ systems, and Mark says his team had to give their manager the password “so he could connect without us having to accept. If the password changed, he requested it by email first thing in the morning”.

    The surveillance, explained Mark’s manager, was aimed at making sure everyone stayed productive and had the same kind of open communication they’d had in the office. In reality, it made Mark anxious, and contributed to him quickly feeling overworked and burnt out. “It was just stressful, feeling that I had to be actively using the computer at all times for fear of him thinking something like a phone call or bathroom break was me slacking off,” he says.

    With the rise in remote work has come a surge in workplace monitoring – some 2022 estimates posit the number of large firms monitoring workers has doubled since the beginning of the pandemic. Some monitoring programs record keystrokes or track computer activity by taking periodic screenshots. Other software records calls or meetings, even accessing employees’ webcams. Or, like in Mark’s case, some programmes enable full remote access to workers’ systems. 

    Regardless of how they choose to monitor workers, many firms are embracing monitoring because they believe it ensures the productivity of remote employees, says Karen Levy, associate professor in the Department of Information Science at Cornell University, US, and author of the book Data Driven: Truckers, Technology, and the New Workplace Surveillance.

    But amid the uptick in monitoring, there’s mounting evidence that electronic surveillance can, in some cases, do more harm than good. Workers chafe against it, and surveillance can lead to stress, cause employees to quit and even make workers do their job worse – on purpose.

    More workers being watched 

    A 2021 study from internet-security tool ExpressVPN of 2,000 employers and 2,000 employees working remotely or on a hybrid schedule showed that close to 80% of bosses use monitoring software.

    “Managers are increasingly interested in using software to monitor employees’ keystrokes, activities and attention in new ways,” says Levy. She adds some are even doing “more fine-grained data collection about workers’ communications – since so much more of that happens on digital channels rather than face-to-face – and bodies, through wearable technologies and biometrics”. Some companies, for instance, have installed time-clocks that scan an employee’s fingerprint to clock them in and out. Some use webcams to collect data on eye movement, which is used to track an employee’s attention.

    Still, says Levy, other companies aren’t just watching what employees are doing in a given moment, but also using that information to anticipate what they might do, through “predictive analytics about whether a worker is likely to, for example, ask for a raise or leave for another job”. Software that monitors employee search history – and even social media – can reveal they’re on the job hunt, and trackers that capture things like tone of voice can indicate a worker’s level of engagement.

    Not every firm keeping tabs on employees is implementing surveillance software due to suspicion; some are required to, says Levy, “for security reasons, or in order to comply with laws or regulations in some industries”.

  • Influencer appears in court to appeal against detention

    Influencer appears in court to appeal against detention

    Influencer Andrew Tate has appeared in court in Romania to appeal against his detention after more than a month in custody. 

    Handcuffed to his brother Tristan, he shouted to waiting for reporters that he was innocent.

    The pair have been held since late December as police investigate allegations of rape and exploitation, which both men deny.

    Last month, a judge extended their detention until the end of February.

    Police have not yet laid any charges against the brothers, who moved to Romania five years ago. 

    Filing an appeal against the custody extension on Wednesday, Andrew’s lawyer Ioan Gliga told journalists that he had “new evidence” to refute prosecutors’ arguments. 

    “The victims deny any wrongdoing – it’s only in the minds of the prosecution that a crime has been committed,” he said.

    A verdict in the appeal is expected later today.

    Also present in court was a new legal adviser hired by the Tate brothers from the United States. Tina Glandian has experience in representing high-profile figures such as Mike Tyson and Chris Brown and specializes in international human rights. 

    There is speculation that her appointment could bring a new approach to the Tates’ legal team, as they try to secure the brothers’ release from preventative custody.

    The brothers – who have both US and British citizenship – have also employed a communications specialist to respond to media interest in the case.

    In explaining his decision to keep the Tates in custody for another month, a judge last week issued a strongly worded statement, describing “the capacity… of the defendants to exercise permanent psychological control over the victims… including by resorting to constant acts of violence”.

    The testimony of alleged victims, he said, “revealed a pattern of action” that lent credibility to their reports. He also highlighted what he said was the “particular dangerousness” of the Tate brothers, in “their ability to target… vulnerable victims”.

    Since then, local media have reported that four complaints were made by alleged victims at a police station near the Tate compound – at least one of them as far back as 2021. At least one of the complaints was reportedly not acted on until the Tate investigation was underway.

    The Police Inspectorate said in a statement that it had “started checks” into the actions of officers there, to determine if any legal measures should follow.

  • Llysfaen man gambled away £500,000 by his late 20s

    Llysfaen man gambled away £500,000 by his late 20s

    A man who lost £500,000 betting has described how his gambling addiction started with gaming as a teenager.

    Jordan Lea, from Llysfaen, Conwy county, started placing bets at about 14, and by his late 20s, was in huge debt. 

    He has set up a gambling help charity that is seeing “a huge amount” of young people getting hooked. 

    Early education on problem gambling is urgently needed, Public Health Wales (PHW) said.

    Mr Lea said there was “a very prominent link” between gaming and gambling, adding: “I actually became addicted to gambling through gaming when I was 14 or 15 years old.

    “By the time I was 18, I was already primed for quite a severe gambling addiction, which led me down a [path to the] criminal justice system.”

    By his late 20s, his life had collapsed into debt and compulsive betting, he told BBC Radio Wales.

    But his life changed when a casino croupier confronted him about his problem.

    “I just broke down in tears,” he said. 

    “That was the catalyst that really pushed me to get help.”

    He later founded Deal Me Out, an awareness and education charity on gambling and gaming-related harms in Wales.

    “People call it the hidden addiction,” he said. 

    “With online gambling it’s on your phone, you have a casino in your pocket. You can do that on the toilet without being seen by anyone.”

    He believes a “severe lack of education” about the dangers of gambling meant his problems went unacknowledged for years.

    As a support worker, his “primary concern” is now for young people getting hooked online “through skin betting with crypto websites”.

    He said “frontline education” is needed for young people and their parents.

    PHW said the links between gambling and gaming need to be acknowledged.

    It called for urgent action to tighten “regulation of gambling industry advertising and practices”.

    The organisation also wants early education, more addiction support, and help from frontline health workers to identify problem gamblers and get them the help they need. 

    PHW’s Annie Ashman said harmful gambling was having “devastating effects” on health and wellbeing.

    “A system-wide approach is needed to take action on every level of the causes and resulting harms that gambling can have,” she said. 

    “This includes knocking down the barrier of shame and stigma, early education in schools, empowering GPs and other frontline services to identify and refer on to specialist services.”

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