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            <title><![CDATA[Australia tells SingTel-owned Optus to pay cost of replacing hacked ID documents]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@dgjvbndyhg/australia-tells-singtel-owned-optus-to-pay-cost-of-replacing-hacked-id-documents</link>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2022 06:37:04 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian telecoms giant Optus must pay the cost of replacing the passports and drivers licences of millions of customers whose personal information was stolen in one of the country&apos;s biggest data breaches, the government said on Thursday. The theft of data attached to 10 million customer accounts, equivalent to 40% of Australia&apos;s population, was the result of an error by Optus so it was up to the Singapore Telecommunications-owned company to pay for the conseque...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian telecoms giant Optus must pay the cost of replacing the passports and drivers licences of millions of customers whose personal information was stolen in one of the country&apos;s biggest data breaches, the government said on Thursday.</p><p>The theft of data attached to 10 million customer accounts, equivalent to 40% of Australia&apos;s population, was the result of an error by Optus so it was up to the Singapore Telecommunications-owned company to pay for the consequences, Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones said.</p><p>&quot;Optus is absolutely responsible for paying for the costs and the implications of this for customers, whether it&apos;s the replacement of a licence, whether it&apos;s the replacement of a passport, or other necessary pieces of ID,&quot; Jones told reporters in Sydney. He did not give a dollar figure for the costs.</p><p>An Optus representative was not immediately available to respond to Jones&apos;s comments. Optus has apologised for the breach and said it would pay for the most affected customers to receive credit monitoring for a year.</p><p>The comments underscore the growing tension between Australia&apos;s government and its second-largest telco as internet companies, banks and government authorities scramble to minimise the risk of being similarly hacked.</p><p>The operator of an anonymous account had in an online chatroom demanded $1 million to refrain from selling the Optus customer data, only to later withdraw the demand and apologise, citing heightened publicity. Optus and law enforcement authorities have not verified the demand, although cybersecurity experts say it was most likely authentic.</p><p>The stolen data included passport numbers, drivers licence numbers, government health insurance numbers, phone numbers and home addresses, prompting commentators and lawmakers to demand replacement documents.</p><p>Other large internet firms meanwhile said they were running extra cybersecurity checks to reduce the risk of a similar breach.</p><p>&quot;In light of the recent Optus breach, we have been working closely with our cybersecurity partners and the relevant government agencies to increase our checks,&quot; said a spokesperson for No. 3 internet provider TPG Telecom Ltd, which has about 6 million customers.</p><p>A spokesperson for Telstra Corp, Australia&apos;s largest internet provider, said in an email: &quot;We will continue to consider what other steps we may need to put in place as we learn more about the Optus incident&quot;.</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>dgjvbndyhg@newsletter.paragraph.com (dgjvbndyhg)</author>
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            <title><![CDATA[All shook up: 'America’s Got Talent' shockingly resurrects 'greatest rock act ever' for Season 17 finals]]></title>
            <link>https://paragraph.com/@dgjvbndyhg/all-shook-up-america-s-got-talent-shockingly-resurrects-greatest-rock-act-ever-for-season-17-finals</link>
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            <pubDate>Thu, 15 Sep 2022 07:17:18 GMT</pubDate>
            <description><![CDATA[The America’s Got Talent Season 17 finals took place Tuesday, with some of the 11 contestants rising to the challenge — like Australian pole dancer/multimedia storyteller Kristy Sellars, whom judge Howie Mandel described as “perfection,” and Lebanese dance troupe me Mayyas, whom Howie said were “so great for women, female empowerment, and your culture” and Heidi Klum called a “million-dollar act.” Others, however, sadly fell short of their previous high expectations, like Dolly Parton-champio...]]></description>
            <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The <em>America’s Got Talent</em> Season 17 finals took place Tuesday, with some of the 11 contestants rising to the challenge — like Australian pole dancer/multimedia storyteller Kristy Sellars, whom judge Howie Mandel described as “perfection,” and Lebanese dance troupe me Mayyas, whom Howie said were “so great for women, female empowerment, and your culture” and Heidi Klum called a “million-dollar act.” Others, however, sadly fell short of their previous high expectations, like Dolly Parton-championed country music trio Chapel Hart, whose original song “American Pride” showcased their surprising vocal shortcomings and likely doomed their chances.</p><p>But it’s looking like all of those contestants could get upstaged and outranked by an augmented-reality gimmick contestant, MetaPhysic. Two weeks ago, Simon Cowell hyperbolically declared MetaPhysic the greatest act in <em>AGT</em> history. Of course, Simon is probably biased, since MetaPhysic have always made Simon — or at least a creepy cyborg Simon — part of their shtick, reimagining him as a world-class opera tenor. Later, a deepfake Howie and Terry Crews joined in for an artificially intelligent quarterfinals performance of “Nessun Dorma,” and this week, MetaPhysic further curried the judges’ favor by including Uncanny Valley fembot facsimiles of Heidi and Sofia Vergara as backup singers alongside the faux Simon.</p><p>But Sofia and Heidi <em>aren’t</em> what gave MetaPhysic the edge this week. What could actually secure MetaPhysic the Season 17 championship was another special “guest performer.” For their final number, MetaPhysic made good on their promise to digitally resurrect “the greatest rock act ever,” and they brought Elvis Presley back to life onstage. Viva Las Vegas, indeed.</p>]]></content:encoded>
            <author>dgjvbndyhg@newsletter.paragraph.com (dgjvbndyhg)</author>
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