'Red flags': why the taxman needs to worry about Amazon
As local retailers worry about the arrival of Amazon destroying their business, the taxman will need to start worrying about how Amazon is going to work to minimise its tax bills.
As local retailers worry about the arrival of Amazon destroying their business, the taxman will need to start worrying about how Amazon is going to work to minimise its tax bills.
Tesla and Space X chief executive Elon Musk is known for his spectacular mastery of the media.Â
GPS devices attached to sports stars playing in grand finals this weekend could be in for a bumpy ride, as could the future of Catapult Group, the company that makes them.
In recent days, two London-based food delivery services with connections to Australia have moved to shore up their finances, in markedly different ways. Â
American race car driver Leilani Munter has faced her fair share of sexism.
There is a fierce national debate over energy policy, but also as a (much quieter) debate around Australia's possible role in what is being described as "the second space age" begins to play out.
The lack of female founders and mentors in Australia's tech community is a worry says Blackbird Ventures co-founder Niki Scevak, but the firm is trialling new ways of hiring.
Daimler plans to spend $US1 billion ($1.26 billion) to start production of Mercedes-Benz electric vehicles at its Alabama factory, setting the world's largest luxury-car maker up to battle with battery-car specialist Tesla on its home turf.
A secretive, billion-dollar start-up founded by an Australian designer, is taking its first steps out of the shadows and into the spotlight.Â
The Tesla billionaire published a blooper reel of the company's many failed attempts to land its rockets so they could be used again.
Nobel-prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz on how to stop inequality and tax avoidance
It's been a busy week for Apple. While its CEO Tim Cook showed off the 10th anniversary iPhone in California, he had his lieutenants work half a world away on what may become the company's largest deal ever.
Entrepreneurs, it turns out, do not just move fast and break things, as Facebook's longtime credo put it. They are also more likely than others to cross the line.
The world's biggest technology companies all had to overcome ridiculous, seemingly insurmountable odds to get where they are today. Having scaled the summits of capitalism, they are now facing a different, and arguably even more unpredictable, kind of challenge. Â
Cirque du Soleil's CEO Daniel Lamarre is heading to Melbourne, but not for the circus.
People already spend a lot of time staring at their phones and holding them up to things, including their own faces (selfies, anyone?). The future Apple envisages involves them doing this even more.
The latest contender for space in your refrigerator is milk made from yellow peas.
While plenty of people like to say they have entrepreneurship running through their veins, in Samantha Wong's case it's actually true.
Corporate America's sweetheart, Ariel Investments president Mellody Hobson, talks on gender and politics.
Just when a lot of industries are paying more attention to work-life balance, tech companies is branding workaholism as a desirable lifestyle choice.
It's not just Amazon that is threatening Australia's e-commerce scene.
The billionaires have joined other business giants backing a start-up that makes meat from self-producing animal cells.
Amazon, the $US500 billion ($630 billion) gorilla stalking Australian retail, took a giant step towards establishing a bona fide e-commerce presence in this country last week.
Tesla is burning through cash with gleeful abandon. But for its long-term believers, it doesn't seem to matter.
A different kind of tax is powering Apple's profits
A dispute between two of the most ambitious new entrants to Australia's $2 trillion superannuation industry is on the radar of regulators and has enthralled the fintech community.
"A year from now, if he hits the goal and is selling half-a-million cars to overwhelmingly satisfied customers, even the skeptics might dub him Iron Man." is how one analyst puts it.
As Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos jockey for the designation of world's wealthiest man, the two billionaires are united behind at least one local venture - an Uber for trucking.
It wasn't that long ago - in the scheme of things - that technology, in a business context, to many (misguided people) meant 'IT department'. Now tech permeates everything.
It's not the first time the two tech moguls have clashed publicly.
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