logo
Australia news live: Albanese speaks with Macron about Gaza; eSafety boss lashes Apple and YouTube over child safety

Australia news live: Albanese speaks with Macron about Gaza; eSafety boss lashes Apple and YouTube over child safety

The Guardian2 days ago
Update:
Date: 2025-08-05T20:48:27.000Z
Title: Queensland teachers to strike from today
Content: Members of the Queensland Teachers' Union will walk off the job today for the first time since 2009.
About 50,000 union members are expecting to strike without pay, with thousands of Brisbane members planning to march on parliament. Members will also gather in several regional locations, including Cairns, Townsville, the Sunshine Coast and Toowoomba.
The QTU president, Cresta Richardson, said the union was protesting against a pay offer in a new enterprise bargaining agreement from the state government that would 'place members at the bottom end of the Australian pay scale in three years', after months of negotiations.
Our members have voted unanimously to send this government a clear message. We are united and dedicated to turning around the exodus of burned-out teachers and school leaders from our schools. Our students and school communities need the government to do its job.
Queensland's state government is currently locked in negotiation with several public sector unions, including the nurses' union, Professionals Australia and the Queensland Professional Firefighters Union. Conciliation over teachers' bargaining will soon begin at the Industrial Relations Commission.
Update:
Date: 2025-08-05T20:48:17.000Z
Title: Apple and YouTube not tracking number of child sexual abuse reports, eSafety commissioner says
Content:
YouTube and Apple have not been tracking the number of users reporting child sexual abuse on their platforms, the eSafety commissioner, Julie Inman Grant, has said.
In the latest transparency report from eSafety covering Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Discord, WhatsApp and Skype, both Apple and Google also failed to provide numbers on trust and safety staff employed at the companies.
In the reports covering what the platforms are doing to tackle child sexual abuse on their services, Inman Grant said many of the issues identified by her office in 2022 and 2023 had not been addressed meaningfully.
She said:
In the case of Apple services and Google's YouTube, they didn't even answer our questions about how many user reports they received about child sexual abuse on their services or details of how many Trust & Safety personnel Apple and Google have on-staff.
It shows that when left to their own devices, these companies aren't prioritising the protection of children and are seemingly turning a blind eye to crimes occurring on their services.
The companies are required to report to her every six months.
Update:
Date: 2025-08-05T20:43:15.000Z
Title: Anthony Albanese speaks to Emmanuel Macron about Gaza, climate and trade
Content: The prime minister had a chat on the phone with France's president overnight, according to an official readout passed on to the media.
It said Albanese and Macron spoke about the crisis in Gaza and 'their ongoing commitment to getting aid to civilians'.
Both leaders discussed their longstanding support for a two state solution (France recently committed to recognising a Palestinian state, but the readout didn't say if this specifically came up).
They also discussed action on climate and France's support for Australia's joint bid to host Cop 31 in partnership with the Pacific.
They agreed on 'the importance of finalising the Australia-EU Free Trade Agreement', the readout said, and signed off by promising to 'stay in close touch and meet again at the United Nations General Assembly in September'.
Update:
Date: 2025-08-05T20:42:49.000Z
Title: Welcome
Content: Good morning and welcome to our live news blog. I'm Martin Farrer with the best stories making news this morning before Nick Visser steps up to the plate.
Teachers in Queensland are going on strike today over pay in their first walk out since 2009. Approximately 50,000 teachers will be striking without pay with thousands planning to march through Brisbane to highlight their claim. More coming up.
There's more pressure on Anthony Albanese to take more action against Israel this morning, this time from interfaith and community groups including the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, the Australian Jewish Democratic Society, the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, and Palestinian Christians in Australia. It comes amid reports this morning that the prime minister has spoken to the head of the UN and also to the head of the Palestinian Authority as he explores ways to help end the Gaza war. More coming up.
Speaking of which, Albanese also spoke with France's Emmanuel Macron overnight, and the discussion included Gaza. More on that very soon.
The retail chain Kmart is facing accusations it misled customers on its ethical credentials by sourcing clothing supplies from factories in China with links to slave labour. It is being sued by an Australian-based Uyghur group at the federal court. More details shortly.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tunisian president's supporters protest against UGTT union amid rising tensions
Tunisian president's supporters protest against UGTT union amid rising tensions

Reuters

time31 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Tunisian president's supporters protest against UGTT union amid rising tensions

TUNIS, Aug 7 (Reuters) - Hundreds of supporters of Tunisian President Kais Saied staged a rally outside the headquarters of the powerful UGTT union on Thursday and urged Saied to suspend the union following a transport strike last week that paralysed the country. The rally highlights growing fears among activists and opposition supporters of a possible move by Saied against one of the last major independent organisations in the North African country. Saied assumed sweeping powers in 2021, shut down the elected parliament, started ruling by decree, suspended the Supreme Judicial Council and sacked dozens of judges in a move the opposition described as a coup. He said his actions were legal and intended to halt rampant chaos. The protesters chanted slogans such as "The people want the union to be suspended!" and urged Saied to intervene against what they described as "union gangs". The UGTT said it was under attack by criminal gangs which it accused of recruiting children to attack its headquarters. Union spokesman Sami Tahri also said the authorities were behind the protest rally. Dozens of union members staged a counter-demonstration and shouted anti-government slogans. "The union will remain steadfast and independent," they chanted. Police were deployed to prevent clashes between the two sides. The union's leadership will meet soon to decide on further actions, spokesman Tahri said. Thursday's rally followed a three-day nationwide transport strike led by the UGTT that paralysed land travel across Tunisia and underscored the union's continued ability to mobilise protest in a landscape increasingly dominated by Saied. Rights groups said that since 2021 the president has moved to dismantle or sideline opposition voices and civil society, opens new tab groups, imprisoned top opposition politicians and tightened control over the judiciary. The UGTT, which played a key role in Tunisia's post-revolution transition, has remained openly critical of Saied's concentration of power — making it a potential target in what critics describe as an accelerating authoritarian drift. While the UGTT initially supported Saied's decision to shut down parliament in 2021, it opposed his subsequent measures, describing them as an attempt to entrench one-man rule.

Australia's most acid-tongued food critic gloats after viral restaurant that blacklisted him collapses
Australia's most acid-tongued food critic gloats after viral restaurant that blacklisted him collapses

Daily Mail​

time33 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Australia's most acid-tongued food critic gloats after viral restaurant that blacklisted him collapses

Veteran food critic John Lethlean has joked he was 'shattered' to learn a Melbourne restaurant whose owner once blacklisted him has entered administration. Iconic Thornbury Italian venue 1800 Lasagne this month entered into voluntary administration - five years after its owner John Kellock set up shop on High Street. In a post to social media on Tuesday, the hatted restaurant shared a 'heartfelt message' advising it would restructure while remaining open for service, the latest addition to the many casualties of Melbourne's embattled hospitality sector. It was a sombre update for the city's lasagne lovers - the restaurant had become extremely popular during Covid for it's late-night home delivery. Lethlean was among those who claimed to be heartbroken by the news, though his sincerity seemed tongue-in-cheek, given the fact he was barred from the restaurant over a controversial food review. 'Shattered by the news the company behind 1800 Lasagne has gone into administration,' he wrote to Instagram. Alongside the post, he shared an image of a coaster printed by the restaurant in 2023 reading: 'Management reserves the right to refuse entry to John Lethlean'. 1800 Lasagne had printed the coasters in response to an Instagram post by Lethlean promoting a review he wrote for food magazine Delicious on Perth restaurant Shui. The review caused widespread backlash. 'The maitre d'/meet and greeter wears an outfit that threatens to expose more than just her inexperience when she bends over to set a table,' Lethlean had written. It immediately landed him in hot water - with prominent critics deriding his language as inappropriate, including Mr Kellock, 1800 Lasagne's owner. 'I would protect my staff to the death from someone who was commenting on what they were wearing,' Mr Kellock told the Sydney Morning Herald's CBD column. 'He [Lethlean] wasn't reading the room, he wasn't in the room, he wasn't even in the house that the room is in, he's so far out of touch.' The long-time reviewer for The Australian apologised for causing offence before doubling-down, claiming his testimony was appropriately unflinching. 'Restaurant reviewing is about observation, commentary and the reader. I conveyed what I observed,' he told the newspaper. 'I don't write for the industry, I write for consumers, and if a few of the so-called journalists in this space did the same, they might have long careers too.' With more than two decades writing for major Australian newspapers and magazines, Lethlean has seen countless restaurants come and go. 1800 Lasagne has entered into voluntary administration five years after its owner John Kellock (pictured) set up shop on High Street His one-star review of legendary chef Cheong Liew's The Grange in 2008 contributed to its closure the following year. Lethlean also didn't hold back when the famed King Island Dairy announced it's closure last year. 'The cheeses have always been rubbish and this so-called brie I have here… completely devoid of any character whatsoever unless all you're looking for in a soft, white mould cheese is industrial salt,' he wrote. It's hardly surprising, then, his sympathy would be in short supply for one whose owner was happy enough to wade into a controversy of his own. In 2021, as lockdowns put swathes of the country's hospitality sector on ice, Lethlean wrote for The Australian that lasagne had emerged as the era-defining food. 'One Melbourne home-delivery lasagne guy, 1800 Lasagne, did so well last year that he's now got the readies to go bricks-and-mortar with his own lasagne-dedicated restaurant,' he wrote. He closed with a prayer that lasagne wouldn't become the 'dish that defines the whole decade' and, with the update from High Street, it seems it may have been answered. It is not clear what precipitated 1800 Lasagne's entry into voluntary administration, but it said its trading hours and delivery options remained unchanged. '1800 Lasagne has always been about people, passion, and plates of love - and that hasn't changed,' it said. 'We're grateful for the support of our incredible community and encourage everyone to keep showing love and support to local hospitality.'

Popular mobile discontinued just weeks after controversial phone model linked to ‘overheating and fires'
Popular mobile discontinued just weeks after controversial phone model linked to ‘overheating and fires'

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Popular mobile discontinued just weeks after controversial phone model linked to ‘overheating and fires'

A POPULAR mobile has been discontinued just weeks after the controversial model was linked to overheating and catching fire. The device has been facing multiple battery issues lately with many users complaining about the increasing heating problems. 2 Google has been rolling out a battery reduction update over the past month for its Pixel 6a in the interest of user safety. An issue with the batteries inside some of the devices has been leading to some units overheating. There have been several incidents where the phone has randomly caught fire or burst into flames while being charged. Google has now quietly removed the Pixel 6a refurbished unit from its official store as a result. Battery update issues As a precautionary measure, Google recently rolled out a mandatory software update that cuts battery capacity and charging speeds for affected devices. This was in an effort to ensure that the battery temperature stays under the limit and the potential issues are avoided. However, despite installing the update, many have still reported concerns. If you are an owner of the Pixel 6a, the only way to stay safe from the potentially dangerous issue is to get a new battery or replace the device entirely. A Pixel 6a user in Australia recently said their device suddenly caught fire and melted beside them as they slept. This is despite installing Google's recent mandatory battery performance update. Inside Google's new AI button and chatbot trick for holidays Removed from the store The Google Store sells a handful of discounted, refurbished Pixel phones including the Pixel 6 series and Pixel 7 series. They are available for hundreds off their original retail price and the Pixel 6a was included until very recently. While it's not known exactly when the change was made, the refurbished Pixel 6a was still available on July 22. The Pixel 6, Pixel 6 Pro, Pixel 7a and Pixel 7 Pro all remain for sale at unchanged prices. This is only the second update Google has made to its refurbished Pixel lineup since introducing it in 2024. It is expected the Pixel 8 devices will be joining the list as Pixel 10 approaches. The news of Google's battery issues comes as a woman won £150,000 after her phone went up in flames after she left it on charge overnight. A laptop and two mobile phones, a Samsung Galaxy S7 and LG K8, were left charging on a couch before Denise and Robert Parks retired for the night. Denise has successfully sued former phone manufacturer LG for nearly £150,000 after one of its devices sparked a fire in her home in North Lanarkshire.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store