Meta's new experiment is part of the tech giant's cautious return to the use of facial recognition, having backed away from the technology amid a series of costly lawsuits.
The world's largest home robotics company has a problem – its vacuum cleaners can be hacked from afar
Without even entering the building, we were able to silently peer through the camera on a Deebot device made by Chinese giant Ecovacs.
Photo shows A series of photos of someone in a kitchen, taken from ground levelHundreds of email addresses shared in 'horrific' Victorian victims of crime administrative error
Hundreds of email addresses, some understood to belong to victims of crime, have been shared in a Victorian courts administrative blunder, leaving at least one victim "very frightened" about the fallout.
Photo shows Fingers on a computer keyboard.Merivale played CCTV video of people having sex to hundreds of staff at company party
Explicit and uncensored CCTV vision of people having sex in a lift and urinating in public was turned into a video and played to hundreds of staff at a Merivale awards night.
Photo shows A composite image showing photos taken from CCTV vision.Qld traffic camera privacy reviews to be made public by opposition amid growing concerns
The Transport Department and minister have said neither review is ready to be made public, despite one being completed two years ago.
Photo shows Drivers caught with seatbelt under their arm'No blood, no job': The companies ruling out job applicants who refuse to take blood tests
Workers are being asked to undergo blood tests as part of the recruitment process, particularly in the mining and resources sectors, with no guarantee their health information is secure, a new report has found.
Photo shows A female mine worker walks past a mine dump truck at a coal mine in central Queensland.Call for mobile detection cam reviews to be made public amid fears drivers may be snapped in state of 'undress'
Civil liberties advocates in Queensland remain concerned the cameras could capture nudity, underwear or private moments and are calling on the government to release the findings of two independent reviews into the privacy implications.
Photo shows Black and white photo of woman in car without seatbeltElon Musk's use of data from X to train AI may breach Australian privacy law, regulator says
Australia's privacy watchdog says there's "cause for concern" over X's harvesting of the user data of its Australian users to train a new generation of AI chatbots.
Photo shows The logo of tech company X on a wall, with the profile of a person looking at a smartphone in front of it.Is Australia snoozing through the 'largest gold rush in the history of capitalism'?
Experts say AI is the "largest gold rush in the history of capitalism", and that Australia is falling behind. But there's something else we're also trailing the pack on: the time it takes to manage privacy settings on websites.
Photo shows A colourful illustrations shows the neon paths of computer circuits arranged to resemble an illuminated human brain.Generative AI is being trained with images of Australian children without consent
An investigation by Human Rights Watch has found hundreds of photos of Australians, including children, being used without consent to train Generative AI. Technology and human rights expert Edward Santow explains what this means and why it’s a problem.
Has Video Duration: 4 minutes 3 seconds.The world's biggest AI models were trained using images of Australian kids, and their families had no idea
The privacy of Australian children is being violated on a large scale, with their personal images — and sometimes their names and locations — being used to train the AI powering most of the world's image-generators.
Photo shows A visualisation of a computer drawing of a face dissolving.'We keep finding things that are not right': Should you trust a house-sitter from the internet?
House-sitting platforms are connecting sitters and home owners for a fee. But who's responsible when things go wrong?
Photo shows An illustration of a woman swimming in a pool in the Australian bushThe fight to keep your personal messages private
Information we share online can be used to spy on us, influence the advertising we see, train algorithms, and more. To avoid this some messaging apps use encryption allowing people to communicate privately.
Has Video Duration: 8 minutes 7 seconds.Coles and Telstra are being impersonated by scammers. Here's how to spot a phishing scam
Scammers are using loyalty point programs as the latest way to try to trick you. To keep you safe, here are the common signs to watch out for.
Topic:Explainer
Photo shows A screenshot of a Coles loyalty points scam text message that asks customers to click on the link to redeem their pointsResident shocked as private ratepayer information published to council website
City of Moreton Bay council says an investigation has been launched into how names, addresses, phone numbers and complaint details were accidentally published online.
Photo shows group of people walking down jetty at Moreton BaySecretive database that allows real estate agents to keep tabs on renters indefinitely 'breached privacy rights'
The Australian Information Commissioner found TICA's controversial "virtual manager" service, which allows real estate agents to track tenants indefinitely, was subject to the same restrictions as the company's formal tenancy blacklist.
Photo shows A "for lease" sign on a suburban street.'Feels a bit like an invasion of privacy': Australians react to Meta's use of posts to train AI
If you're among the majority of Australians with Facebook or Instagram accounts, your social activity on those platforms might be training Meta's artificial intelligence (AI) tools — and if you live in Australia, you can't say no.
Photo shows FACEBOOK GENERIC PHOTOMedibank legal case a 'wake-up' call for Australian businesses
The Australian Information Commissioner is suing Medibank over a 2022 hack that leaked sensitive data about millions of Australians.
Photo shows A man stands in an alleyway.How do I know if I've been hacked? Here's what experts say to look out for in light of the Ticketmaster breach
Around 2 million Australians may be caught up in the Ticketmaster hack. Here's what you should be looking out for and how to protect yourself from hackers and scammers.
Topic:Explainer
Photo shows A computer with hacking software on the screen and someone's hands typing on the keyboardOptus to defend allegations it didn't properly protect its customers' details in a cyber attack
The details of millions of Optus customers were exposed when an offshore actor hacked its company database two years ago.
Photo shows a phone screen showing an email from Optus that says "urgent updates"It would take almost 46 hours to read every privacy policy you agree to in a month. Here's why that's concerning
Many Australian consumers are unaware of the extent of personal data being collected about them on a day-to-day basis, says a new report.
Photo shows An iPhone shows various apps against a black background.