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The Sydney Morning Herald - smh.com.au

The Sydney Morning Herald - smh.com.au
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  1. Cybercriminals are exploiting the disappearance of a Malaysia Airlines plane by luring users to websites purporting to offer the latest news in order to steal their personal information, an internet security firm warns.

    Trend Micro said it...s global network of research, service and support centres TrendLabs had spotted an executable file disguised as a video that, when clicked, allowed scammers to collect a users' data, such as their IP address.
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  3. Even by Parliament House's standards it seemed a particularly petty squabble: a dispute between Coalition and Labor politicians over which television channel to watch in the parliamentary gym.

    The brouhaha erupted earlier this month when T...asmanian Liberal MP Andrew Nikolic and Immigration Minister Scott Morrison were watching Sky News while exercising. This sparked an intervention from Queensland Labor Senator Claire Moore who asked for the channel to be changed to the ABC.

    If ever there was a potent symbol of the hyper-polarisation of Australia's political-media bubble, this was it.
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  4. Assistant Treasurer Arthur Sinodinos has stepped aside from the frontbench after political pressure over business dealings that are before a NSW anti-corruption inquiry.

    The Assistant Treasurer made a short statement at the beginning of Se...nate question time on Wednesday, after weathering three days of damaging headlines about his involvement in Australian Water Holdings - a company associated with corrupt former Labor minister Eddie Obeid.
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  5. Thailand's military said on Tuesday that its radar detected a plane that may have been Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 just minutes after the jetliner's communications went down, and that it didn't share the information with Malaysia earlier b...ecause it wasn't specifically asked for it.

    Thailand's failure to quickly share possible information may not substantially change what Malaysian officials know, but it raises questions about the degree to which some countries are sharing their defence information, even in the name of an urgent and mind-bending aviation mystery.
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  6. Australian taxpayers will lend $US100 million ($110.6 million) to a mining joint-venture run by BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto in Chile, under the latest funding deal by Australia's controversial Export Finance and Insurance Corporation.

    The l...oan to two of Australia's largest and most profitable companies comes despite recent criticism of EFIC from the Productivity Commission, which advised the corporation to focus more on small exporters unable to secure finance, rather than big multinationals.See More
  7. Global warming will displace millions of people, trigger falling crop yields, stoke conflict and cost trillions of dollars in lost economic output, a United Nations report will warn.

    A draft of the report to be finalised later this month by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), says “hundreds of millions of people” will be forced to move because of coastal flooding and land loss as sea levels rise.
  8. The terrified screams of a traumatised sex-trafficked teenager, witnessed by an Australian billionaire, have led to a history-making alliance between three of the world's major religions to end slavery.
  9. As far as investigators have been able to determine, there have been no phone calls, Twitter or Weibo postings, Instagram photos or any other communication from anyone aboard the missing Malaysia Airlines plane since it was diverted.
  10. The ABC has apologised to Andrew Bolt after the conservative commentator said he was "devastated" by comments made by indigenous academic Marcia Langton on Q&A.

    Update: The apology has failed to appease Mr Bolt. http://ow.ly/uGFbs.
  11. James Gillespie is not a professional filmmaker, nor has he ever been in a fight. But when the 27-year-old brought his friends together to create a short video for the Herald's Safer Sydney campaign, the result was a powerful message.

    Over... the course of three 30-second videos Mr Gillespie grabbed the attention of the judging panel and took home the grand prize of $2500. But the message he wants Sydney to walk away with is that when it comes to fighting, ''winning can be a bad thing''.
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  12. Comment: I wrote a few paragraphs of this column between school drop-off and an appointment. I sent a bunch of emails between making dinner and taekwondo. Bedtime reading with the kids, then more writing at 1am, after a few hours of sleep. Then back up at 4am to write and sign up for summer camp.

    There's a name for this. It's called "time confetti". It's miserable. And it's part of why we are all Overwhelmed.
  13. "This new Malaysian revelation again raises the spectre of terrorism. Terrorism certainly cannot be ruled out, but seems less likely than other possibilities. Terrorism is by definition politically-motivated with a strategic outcome in mind....

    If terrorism was the motivation you would expect that the perpetrators would have already used the plane as a weapon against a possible target, such as Mumbai or Colombo, would have made political demands, or would have tried to put pressure on a target government."
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  14. It was notably undiplomatic language for Australia's Foreign Minister, Julie Bishop, to use in a public space.

    "OMFG this blog by you is crazy," Ms Bishop said on Twitter early this morning.

    "I'm lol'n so much right now at this," the Fore...ign Minister added to another person on the popular social network. She followed that post with more than a dozen tweets, littered with hahas and LOLs and ROFLs and LMFAOs.

    So who hacked the Foreign Minister's Twitter account?
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  15. The missing Malaysia Airlines passenger jet was more likely to have travelled along a southern course near Australia, and should have been picked up by Australia's Jindalee radar network if it did so, a leading surveillance analyst says.
  16. Comment: The Sydney Biennale does not officially open until Friday, but already it has transfixed audiences with a bold, confronting series of interconnected performance works, writes Annabel Crabb.
  17. Up to 12,000 people gathered at Belmore Park to rally against the federal government in Sydney's March in March protest.

    Photo by Dean Sewell. See more photos from the protest here: http://ow.ly/uDbBA
    Photo: Up to 12,000 people gathered at Belmore Park to rally against the federal government in Sydney's March in March protest. 

Photo by Dean Sewell. See more photos from the protest here: http://ow.ly/uDbBA
  18. From this week's Good Weekend Magazine: Three successful Australians tell how they learned to overcome the bullies and feelings of worthlessness that dogged their school days. http://ow.ly/uD7Rd
    Photo: From this week's Good Weekend Magazine: Three successful Australians tell how they learned to overcome the bullies and feelings of worthlessness that dogged their school days. http://ow.ly/uD7Rd
  19. ''He never physically hit me until the day I left,'' said Tamara.

    ''He'd throw things at me, call me every name under the sun, make sure I had no contact with my family or my friends but I thought domestic violence was a woman getting punc...hed.''

    Our #shinealight campaign on domestic violence continues with this look inside a Mission Australia centre in Goulburn. Incidents of domestic violence in rural NSW per capita are up to 10 times worse than the city. Those working to help women fleeing violence say refuges and accommodation services need more support.


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  20. Nine out of 10 offices in Australia are open plan, but while managers think the design is great for saving money and fostering collaboration, many workers complain they are noisy, distracting and lack privacy.

    New Swedish research found open plan offices also make workers sicker than the private offices of old, with women particularly at risk.
  21. Pop-up bars, cafes, performance stages, and electronic screens are all part of the latest plan for Sydney's version of the New York "High Line".

    Pedestrians should be able to walk the first section of the redeveloped goods line, a 500-metre stretch linking Central with Haymarket, Ultimo and Darling Harbour, by the end of this year.
  22. Consumer group Choice has applied the algorithm for the healthy food star rating system - controversially removed by Assistant Health Minister Fiona Nash - to children's lunch box staples, giving them the star ratings that could appear on p...ackaged foods from July.

    They found big nutritional differences between similar-looking products, with wholemeal, salt-reduced and skim options tending to score higher ratings.

    See how your kids' favourite snacks measure up.

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  23. EXCLUSIVE: Australia's elite soldiers have put their lives and those of others at risk with reckless and drunken behaviour while they were on a tour of duty in one of the world's most dangerous war zones.

    Commandos from the Special Operati...ons Task Group (SOTG) operating in Afghanistan made a DVD series of their escapades while they were patrolling in enemy areas as well as of drunken nights inside the Australian base at Tarin Kowt.


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  24. Police have searched the homes of the captain and co-pilot of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight after it was revealed the plane turned back from its scheduled flight path over the South China Sea and flew for more than seven hours with its communication tracking device disabled.

    According to new data, the Boeing 777 was still flying seven hours after it disappeared en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.

  25. The storm right above the city skyline from Randwick Racecourse. Photo by Jenny Evans. See more photos from the storm here: http://ow.ly/uCa2p
    Photo: The storm right above the city skyline from Randwick Racecourse. Photo by Jenny Evans. See more photos from the storm here: http://ow.ly/uCa2p
  26. The missing Malaysia Airlines jet had its communication devices switched off and was deliberately flown back on its original course, said the Malaysian Prime Minister, Najib Razak.

    "Despite media reports that the plane was hijacked I wish to be very clear that we are still investigating all possibilities,’’ he said.
  27. It was on the lawns of parliament house that Tony Abbott happened upon an unexpected exercise in democracy in the raw.

    On a school excursion in the politicians' own stomping ground on, Year 9 students of Newtown Performing Arts High School engaged the passing Prime Minister in a lively democratic debate.
  28. Mark Isaacs was only 24 when, on the strength of a single phone call and with no experience, he was hired by the Salvos and dispatched to Nauru with less than a week's notice to ''provide support'' to asylum seekers detained there.

    The dat...e was October 1, 2012, just a fortnight after then prime minister Julia Gillard had reopened the offshore camp in a desperate revival of former prime minister John Howard's ''Pacific solution'' - an attempt to deter asylum seekers by shipping them to the tiny Pacific nation for indefinite detention.
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  29. Qantas aircraft sent for maintenance in Asia have been found with corrosion on the wings, multiple cracks, faulty engine indicators and, in the case of a 747 jumbo, three of four engines not held on properly, the aircraft engineers’ union h...as alleged in a dossier detailing a litany of errors.

    The extraordinary attack on maintenance practices in Asia over the years, and against Qantas’ decision to have work carried out there, was made during a Senate inquiry into the airline’s future two weeks after it confirmed that it will axe 5000 jobs as part of a $2 billion cost-cutting program.
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  30. The judge in the Daniel Morcombe murder trial says the case highlights arguments against tougher sentences for sex offenders.

    Justice Roslyn Atkinson says she is concerned harsher jail terms would act as a "perverse incentive" to offenders to kill their victims.

    The judge made her comments on Friday, just before sentencing Daniel's killer Brett Peter Cowan, 44, to life imprisonment including 20 years without parole.
  31. This is the face of homelessness in Sydney. In The Terminal, Tom Hanks played a man who was incarcerated in New York's JFK Airport for nine months.

    Dylan Jay, 19, said he has lived on the concourse at Central Station for two years. Trains... come and go but he isn't going anywhere.

    He is just one of many. The latest figures from the City of Sydney council show a ''serious increase'' in homelessness, with a 26 per cent rise in the number of people sleeping rough over the past year.
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  32. The serial paedophile found guilty of murdering Queensland schoolboy Daniel Morcombe has been sentenced to life in prison, with a non-parole period of 20 years.

    Bruce and Denise Morcombe and their sons, Dean and Bradley, declined to be in ...the courtroom when Justice Rosyln Atkinson handed down her sentence.

    "In view of criminal histories and the enormity of the crime that you have committed it is appropriate in my view to set the parole eligibly date after you have served 20 years of your sentence," Justice Atkinson said.
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  33. A dog owner received a "nasty shock" when she went to let her chihuahua-maltese cross off its chain.

    Inside the dog's kennel, she found a carpet python in its place with a large bulge in its body and the dog's chain emerging from its mouth, according to the native animal rescue service WIRES.
  34. Despite comfortably winning the election and now having to be responsible for stuff, Tony Abbott is still running off at the mouth with mindless opposition slogans, writes Michael Pascoe.

    It wouldn't matter except that some people believe the Prime Minister - vast numbers of Australian innocents have been told they are highly taxed and they're silly enough to believe it, he writes.

  35. Are you smarter than a primary schooler?

    A record number of NSW children sat for the selective schools placement test on Thursday: 13,930 children are in contention for 4188 spots.

    They grappled with questions about codes, patterns, percentages and the meaning of words in the exam, which tests mathematics, general ability, reading and writing.

    Try our interactive test to see the kinds of questions they faced.
  36. Breaking: A suspicious item has been found on a footpath near the Queen Victoria Building in the Sydney CBD, forcing the evacuation of shoppers. http://ow.ly/uxHTA

    "We've got relevant units going down to assess the item," a NSW Police spokesperson said.

    Nearby streets have been closed while police investigate.
  37. A new website will allow Australians to hire platonic friends for “endless possibilities” with one caveat: no physical contact allowed.

    Friends For Hire divides users into two categories: “friends” who may charge up to $60 an hour for their company, and “members” who pay the friends directly as well as a $5 weekly membership fee to the website.
  38. Comment: Julie Bishop must have left her briefing notes behind when she confronted a BBC journalist who accused her government of operating a kind of ''Guantanamo Bay'' for asylum seekers on Nauru and Manus Island, writes Michael Gordon. http://ow.ly/uxgpe
    Photo: Comment: Julie Bishop must have left her briefing notes behind when she confronted a BBC journalist who accused her government of operating a kind of ''Guantanamo Bay'' for asylum seekers on Nauru and Manus Island, writes Michael Gordon. http://ow.ly/uxgpe
  39. Brett Peter Cowan, a 44-year-old father of three, has been found guilty of the murder of Daniel Morcombe.

    Cowan was also found guilty of indecently dealing with a child under the age of 16 and improperly dealing with a corpse.

    Report from our Brisbane news site, Brisbane Times:
  40. Breaking: Brett Peter Cowan has been found guilty of the murder of Daniel Morcombe.
  41. It was supposed to be a mixture of social experiment and prank, filmed in the Sydney CBD for the YouTube generation.

    But it backfired on three youths when one boy was reportedly left with a broken nose by one of the prank's victims.
  42. Scientists say they have found an elusive mineral pointing to the existence of a vast reservoir deep in Earth's mantle, 400 to 600 kilometres beneath the planet's surface.

    It may hold as much water as all the planet's oceans combined, they believe.
  43. Yesterday's fire at Barangaroo could set the construction project - one of the largest in Sydney - back by several months.

    The fire caused more than 2000 people to be evacuated from nearby office blocks, other construction sites and other businesses. Thousands more were inconvenienced by closure of the Western Distributor for close on 10 hours.
  44. An independent audit of the ABC's asylum seeker coverage has uncovered isolated examples that could be perceived as biased – including a television report whose "one purpose" was to elicit sympathy for people smugglers.

    But the review of A...BC television current affairs programs, conducted by former 60 Minutes executive producer Gerald Stone, found no systemic bias in the broadcaster's coverage of the contentious issue. Of the 97 surveyed stories on asylum seekers, 93 raised no concerns.See More