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aussie industries keep out....Take Australian taxpayers’ money, ship it overseas and build groundbreaking capabilities for foreign corporations to export around the world, all at the expense of Australian innovation and jobs. Rex Patrick reports on the quantum betrayal. On April 30 this year, almost exactly a year after the Albanese Labor Government released its National Quantum Strategy “to grow the quantum industry in Australia,” Industry Minister Ed Husic announced we were shipping just short of a billion taxpayer dollars to a US Company, Palo Alto based PsiQuantum, to build a fault-tolerant quantum computer in Brisbane. PsiQuantum has never built a quantum computer before—it was in the same place as other companies in the Australian industry. Injecting $1B into a US company so it can get ahead of the competition in an emerging growth market is hardly growing the quantum industry in Australia. It’s quite the opposite. The Government has given a leg up to a foreign corporation, which Australian industry then has to compete against. It’s a big ‘F’ for the Albanese government – up there with pouring $10B of Australian taxpayers’ money into the US and UK submarine industrial base, giving our gas away for free and allowing foreign criminal enterprises to inflate housing prices with crooked money. I could go on. Nothing to see hereIf one paid just passing attention to this quantum computing procurement, you might think everything was in order. The Government announced its National Quantum Strategy in May 2023, released an Expression of Interest in August 2023 for a fault-tolerant quantum computer to be built in Australia, and then, in May the following year, announced the winner: PsiQuantum. But that’s not what happened. Senate orders for the production of government documents, Senate Estimates questions, and FOI requests have uncovered some disgraceful truths. This includes the FOI’s release to MWM this month. It turns out the fix was in from the start. The first interaction between the Australian Government and PsiQuantum appears to have taken place in May 2019, when Austrade met with the American Company. There were some discussions then, but more substantial interaction between the Australian Government and PsiQuantum commenced after the 2022 Federal election. Prior to December 2022, PsiQuantum submitted an unsolicited proposal to the Government. It impressed the Minister for Science and Industry, Ed Husic, sufficiently to agree to further analysis. In January 2023, Husic visited the firm’s facilities in Palo Alto, California. The visit brief, released recently under FOI, shows that the Government was already well committed to going with PSI even at that early point. For the remaining part of the first half of 2023, some due diligence in relation to PsiQantum was undertaken by the Commonwealth and the Queensland Government. PsiQuantum binding discussions commenced in June 2023 with the Department of Finance being engaged and with Lawyers from King & Wood Mallesons hired in July 2023 for legal, commercial, probity and technical advice. Fraud upon Australian industry?At this point it looked like the Government was simply going to engage in single-sourcing a very significant contract to a foreign corporation. But then the Department set about engaging in a fraud upon Australian industry. In June 2023, they started drafting the Expression of Interest (EOI) that was released in August 2023. The Department recently described the EOI’s purpose to the Senate: “The EOI process tested the international and domestic quantum computing sector’s capability and interest to develop, build and operate a commercial-scale, universal fault-tolerant quantum computer in Australia by 2030 (and preferably earlier), and deliver a range of related benefits to strengthen Australia’s quantum sector and contribute to the national interest.” Twenty-one companies devoted their time, money and efforts to respond. Many of them no doubt freely imparted their good ideas which will be used by government employees moving forward. What they did not know was that the Minister and Department had already predetermined the path forward, and they were not to be involved in any significant way. Contract awarded, competitor born On 30 April 2024 the Government announced their investment decision that PsiQuantum will establish its Asia-Pacific headquarters in Brisbane. 02 May 2024 Austrade, which is supposed to accelerate the growth of exports and attract foreign investors, issued a press release celebrating the contract, the growth of an importer, and the expenditure of taxpayer funds. The Australian Government has injected a billion dollars into a foreign company that will forever compete with the Australian IT industry. It has engaged in a direct betrayal of Australian companies in the sector, tantamount to treason on our high-tech future. Why did the Albanese Government do this? The decision almost certainly went to the very top of the government. Why did they betray and mislead Australian industry and our national interest? That’s a tale yet to be fully unravelled. It’s unlikely to be a very good story.
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
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vanishing aussie voices....
Like a tsunami, America’s influence has been spreading to most regions of the globe. While some countries are willing to allow this and even welcome their own culture being subsumed, others are not so inclined.
Australia stands out as the one English-speaking country – among the Five Eyes countries – where the Americans have almost total sway.
This has come about due to the timidity of Australian government to a large extent, and the fact that many Australians think it is a good thing to be obsessed with a country much more powerful than one’s own.
We are ceding rent free, important parts of our territory to the US for their military bases.
The AUKUS treaty, initiated by a right-wing Coalition government in 2021, has as its aim the use of Australian military hardware as an arm of the Stars and Stripes.
Australia has expressed a willingness to donate billions of dollars to the US and UK submarine industries believing that Canberra will get nuclear submarines for its own forces.
Given the production targets being currently achieved by the US and UK, this seems highly unlikely. But the project is set to drag on into the 2040s. Expecting the hardware to arrive is the ultimate triumph of hope over reason.
Quentin Dempster looks at some of the outer signs of the burying of Australian culture and traditions by the Americans.
Other articles will follow on the Americanisation of Australia.
The Americanisation of Australia: how we’re rapidly losing our cultural sovereignty
There’s no stopping it.
We are being Americanized. That’s spelt with a zee not a zed
“It’s ARSE! It’s ARSE!” wrote an exasperated Aussie complainant.
“You can shove your ‘ass’ up your arse.”
This response in a social media survey (Redditt) of Australian attitudes to the now rapid swamping of our culture with American accents, spelling, language, pronunciation, fast food, style, tastes, entertainment, music, sport and obese utility trucks provided a pertinent summing up.
“Language creep. There are American idioms starting to embed in the language,” said another.
It’s now pronounced com-AAND and not commarnd. De-MAAND not demarnd.
“People saying ‘y’all’. Stop it. Just … stop it!
“Batshit crazy politicians who can’t extract religion from their politics and seem to think their beliefs trump anyone else’s rights”.
And another: “American language and sayings I hate. Most loathed are ‘going to the bathroom’, ‘parking lot,’ ‘sidewalk,’ ‘diaper’, ‘candy’.”
And another: “Leave a tip? F**k. Right. Off!”
So what, you might ask. Language changes with popular usage. Why is this worth bothering about?
Many people obviously are not happy with what they perceive to be the accelerating Americanisation of aspects of Australian life. While there is a relieved acknowledgement that Australia has not followed the terrifyingly perverse US gun culture with its relentless mass shootings, the US influencers operating in Australia now have momentum through the digital revolution’s social media and global tech platforms. Through WiFi transmission of text, video and audio these mainly US platforms have immediate access to all Australian eyeballs and ears.
We will leave to one side foreign and defence policy. The potential loss of Australian sovereignty and independence has been well canvassed by specialists distressed about the ALP/LNP bipartisanship to go all the way with the USA with AUKUS nuclear submarines, US naval, army, air force and satellite surveillance bases operating from Australian soil.
As we all bask in the humble, not hubristic, glory of our returning Olympic athletes dripping with medals, we should perhaps reflect on the Australian character and its own intergenerational evolution.
But such is the dominance of US ways of seeing the world the concern is with Australians being rendered effectively voiceless in their own country and culture.
The issue therefore is cultural sovereignty. At a recent ABCAlumni briefing on audience trends, the dynamic of the digital revolution on Australians was exposed.
Digital and social media now dominate content consumption, particularly young people in their teens, 20s and 30s from cohorts known as GenZ (born between 1997 and 2012) and Millenials (born between 1981 and 1996). Many are speaking with Americisms and adopting American sensibilities.
US social media and video streamers now dominant
Of the total 26 million Australian audience:
Recently the Albanese government legislated to require (mandate) smart TV manufacturers selling their flat screen products to Australians to give “prominence” to Australian TV branded apps including “live now” free-to-air programs on their home pages. Before this measure, you turned on your smart TV and they did not appear. There were only US apps. Because many smart TVs no longer use a terrestrial antenna and only receive their content via a household’s WiFi modem, the local TV networks were losing viewers.
While radio will survive mainly because of its mobile convenience and household companionship, commercial free to air broadcast television is said by some insiders to be in “terminal decline”. It has been losing advertising revenue to the global social media platforms who can offer more money-making precision through data mining of an individual’s age, browsing, geolocation and spending patterns.
Also, the video streamers carry negligible distribution costs through WiFi cyber casting (broadcasting on the internet). That cost is borne in the user’s bill from the internet service provider and his/her designated download limit. The pay-per-view or watching on demand subscription model has taken off. And, undoubtedly, Australians love the convenience and the vast, predominantly US, movie and TV show catalogues. New long form video productions have produced what is known as the “binge” viewing phenomenon.
Unlike Australian free to air television since 1956, there is no made-in-Australia content quota on the video streamers.
That FTA quota imposed by legislation on television licensees was the genesis of Australia’s local television production industry with its training and creative career pathways for all TV production crews, writers, actors, producers and directors. Under current regulations, free-to-air commercial television stations are compelled to broadcast 55% local Australian content between 6am and midnight on their primary channel.
Under its Revive national cultural policy the Albanese government “commits … to regulating Australian content on streaming platforms”. This commitment was subjected to a consultation process with all stakeholders and a Senate committee inquiry with an implementation priority deadline of July 1 this year. The inquiry recommended that 20% of a streamer’s gross Australian revenue had to be spent on local content. Committee chair Senator Sarah Hanson-Young told the Senate the now lapsed July 1 deadline indicated the Albanese government was “rolling over and cowering to the big streaming giants”.
Arts Minister Tony Burke downplayed the delay indicating that an announcement of the government’s intentions was still on track. A departmental spokesman told me: “We have brilliant talent in Australia, and we want to make sure that people have access to Australian scripted drama, documentary and children’s stories across different platforms. Consultation is taking longer than we would have liked, but we are determined to get this right. The government is aiming to introduce legislation as soon as practicable”.
As an immediate measure the government has legislated an amendment to the Income Tax Assessment Act, permanently increasing the location producer’s offset to 30 percent with the minimum qualifying Australian production expenditure thresholds increased from $15 million and $1 million per hour for television series to $20 million and $1.5 million per hour.
This has been welcomed by all players and makes Australia very competitive for projects to be filmed on selected locations with work for sound stages and post-production facilities with potentially enhanced demand here and obvious economic, industry and creative workforce benefits.
But so far the local industry is still waiting for that legislated content quota on the SVODs.
Please note that the audited gross revenues earned by the global US streamers has not been publicly released. It’s commercial in confidence.
Netflix has 6.1million Australian subscribers with an estimated revenue of $1.06billion in 2023. Stan with 2.6million subscribers had estimated revenue of $427million; Disney+ 3.1million subscribers with revenue of $810million.
Through their peak body, the Australia New Zealand Screen Association (ANZSA), the streamers have submitted that they already invest substantially in locally acquired and “Australian-related” content.
Streamers’ Australian – Australian related content investment
Quoting Australian Communication and Media Authority collected data the streamers collectively had invested $777million on “Australian and Australian-related” content in 2022-23.
While this is acknowledged by the local production industry through its peak body, the Screen Producers’ Association (SPA) there is a contentious problem.
In what seemed like a bitter exchange of supplementary submissions to correct possible misperceptions by the Senate inquirers, SPA’s CEO Matthew Deaner warned that Australia’s screen industry risked going forward as a “service provider for Hollywood productions” instead of growing its own storytelling capabilities.
“While we’re waiting, conditions for Australian screen businesses and consequently their workforce are deteriorating due to a noticeable freezing in commissioning, which is creating a lot of anxiety and uncertainty. There’s a growing sense of crisis in the local industry without this reform being in place.”
SPA is concerned that local production companies are at a competitive imbalance and can be forced to surrender their intellectual property in perpetuity if they want contracted work from the streamers. A legislated SVOD quota would enhance commissioning independence and leverage greater Copyright protection in contractual negotiations.
SPA is also concerned Australia’s “binding” commitment to the US free trade agreement may be being used as a reason for the Albanese Cabinet not to legislate a content quota on the US SVODs.
The video streamers through ANZSA dismiss this claim but nevertheless oppose a legislated 20% content quota and any obligation on them must be fair and flexible. “Current calculations show that a 20% of revenue model would require streamers to invest substantially more than current levels.
“For Netflix, a 10% of revenue model would require them to spend 49% more than Channels 7, 9 and 10 combined, and 434% more than the subscription broadcast industry combined. A 20% obligation would therefore be double these amounts, impose a hugely unequal content obligation on streamers when compared with Australian broadcasters”.
There is also a dispute over the definition of what the video streamers claim is now an irrelevant requirement, the Australian Content and Children’s Television Standards.
“ANZSA submits that the ACCTS definition is no longer fit for purpose. It originated in the 1990’s at a time when the world was far less interconnected than it is now. Today, there is intense competition at a global level for talent and capital and the current definition restricts the ability for a streaming service to employ an international producer, or to collaborate with international directors and writers. This ability is essential to raise the investment required to produce many of the great Australian stories made available on streaming services today”.
SPA has also accused the SVODs of withholding some local productions as hardball leverage on the government not to legislate a quota.
ANZSA rejects this saying production schedules are unavoidably “ebb and flow”.
Sandra Levy, one of Australia’s most accomplished TV drama producers, script editors and talent mentors, and a former head of ABC Television, recently wrote for ABCAlumni: “In Australia, as in the rest of the world, the streamers are increasing the cost of drama and changing the audience for whom it’s made. Audiences now have access to screen drama with the best actors, directors, writers and composers in the world, attracted by the bigger budgets and more ambitious stories. The stories need to appeal internationally as that is the remit of the streamers, to attract big numbers of viewers in any country and from any language and cultural background. This affects the choices of stories, the need for a kind of universalism – more of an airport book than a small local story. It’s a trend that’s continuing to grow.”
So something will be lost out of all this global market universalism unless there are mitigating counter measures: what it means to be Australian with a character and voice shaped by the Australian experience.
This was an issue I canvassed in my 2000 book on the ABC’s struggle for survival Death Struggle How political malice and boardroom powerplays are killing the ABC (Allen & Unwin).
While then acknowledging that the US was a dynamic democracy my thinking about Australia was greatly assisted by Robert Hughes’ 1993 foreboding book Culture of Complaint – The Fraying of America. Art critic Hughes, an Australian living in the US, had identified the clear signs of the collapse of social cohesion in that polity. “Robert Hughes’ America showed a society at war with itself, a society of victims, a ‘hollowness at the cultural core’, a ‘nation obsessed with therapies and filled with distrust of formal politics; skeptical of authority and prey to superstition, its language corroded by fake pity and euphemism”. Hughes lamented the political and defunding attack of the Nixon, Reagan and Bush administrations on the US PBS (Public Broadcasting System) as a contributing factor in US “hollowness at the cultural core”.
Now through the digital revolution America is escalating its cultural invasion of Australia. While acknowledging the US video streamers are now spending a lot of money on “Australian related” content, movies and TV shows are commissioned by the US corporations mindful of how global market aggregation of audiences can be achieved.
Sandra Levy told me: “When I was growing up, we were dominated by British content, their stories and voices on our TV screens. We had to fight and lobby for years to get Australian stories seen and accepted. Now we are in danger of a new domination – the global phenomenon of the international streamers – and the potential loss again of our own voices. We need to lobby and fight again to ensure Australian voices and stories survive.”
Over to you Tony Burke. Get a move on.
https://johnmenadue.com/the-americanisation-of-australia-how-were-rapidly-losing-our-cultural-sovereignty/
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
a work of fiction....
In March 2024, the United States government and its Five Eyes allies issued dire warnings about a Chinese state-sponsored hacking group known as “Volt Typhoon.” They alleged a shadowy entity had compromised thousands of devices worldwide to target critical infrastructure in Western nations.
FBI Director Christopher Wray described Volt Typhoon as “the defining threat of our generation” and warned they could aim to “disrupt our military’s ability to mobilise” in a conflict over Taiwan.
However, the timing the announcement suggested otherwise, that the “Volt Typhoon” threat was mostly a work of fiction, crafted by U.S. intelligence agencies to win public support and pressure policymakers to allow the extension of invasive U.S. surveillance powers.
The timing of the Volt Typhoon announcement coincided with the debates over the FISA Section 702 reauthorisation. The actual goal of the announcement more to influence the debate in favour of preserving surveillance powers; as the U.S. Congress deliberated renewing the controversial Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). This provision allows U.S. agencies to collect data on foreign targets without warrants, inevitably capturing the communications of millions of American citizens. As the expiration of Section 702 loomed, Western media outlets began amplifying claims from the FBI and NSA about an imminent Chinese hacking threat, spinning tales of Volt Typhoon infiltrating critical infrastructure. The message was clear: renew broad spying powers or leave the nation vulnerable to a devious Chinese plot.
Upon closer examination, the U.S. government’s narrative about Volt Typhoon quickly unravelled. They alleged the group had been active since mid-2021, yet no concrete evidence was produced to substantiate this claim. The technical details provided were vague and could apply to numerous other hacking groups. Moreover, the Western cybersecurity firms promoting the Volt Typhoon theory, such as ThreatMon and Trellix, have long-standing ties to the U.S. intelligence community and stood to benefit from the extension. Significantly, the names Volt Typhoon, Vanguard Panda, and Bronze Silhouette are actually assigned by Western cybersecurity Firms as much as to identify modes of attack rather than “hacking groups”. These companies lent credibility to the government’s narrative but subsequently, when pressed for hard proof linking Volt Typhoon to China, failed to produce anything convincing, according to many experts.
According to the Chinese government, America is the world’s preeminent hacking superpower. Section 702, the very provision the Volt Typhoon tale was designed to protect, provides the legal basis for the U.S. to conduct massive surveillance and hacking operations globally.
China’s national cybersecurity department, in its rebuttal, noted that from May 2023 to July 2024, U.S. government-linked hackers launched over 45 million cyberattacks against Chinese entities, implicating the CIA, NSA, and FBI in a systematic campaign to infiltrate and undermine Chinese networks.
Information in the public arena supports the Chinese claim that the U.S. has constructed a formidable “hacker empire,” using its technological prowess to spy on adversaries and allies alike.
Edward Snowden and Julian Assange both provided significant insights into the scale and scope of U.S.-sponsored cyber espionage against Russia and China.
Snowden’s leaks revealed the NSA’s extensive surveillance program, aggressive cyberwarfare activity, and hacking of Chinese universities and hospitals.
Assange’s WikiLeaks disclosed U.S. espionage against world leaders, corruption, and U.S. involvement in cyber warfare against China, including stealing secrets and intellectual property.
Combined, the material revealed that the U.S. has been involved in extensive surveillance and hacking activities against Russia and China, targeting government, military, and civilian infrastructure for the purpose of gathering intelligence, stealing secrets, and gaining strategic advantages.
Critics might argue that China’s cybersecurity practices justify Western scrutiny and defensive measures. However, from a Chinese perspective, the continuous portrayal of China as a cyber threat by Western media is misleading and dangerous. Chinese policy papers suggest this narrative is used to justify the aggressive cyber espionage tactics employed by the United States. The accusations against China serve as a smokescreen to divert attention away from the extensive and unparalleled global surveillance apparatus of the hegemon.
China has consistently advocated for a multilateral, transparent, and fair global internet governance system. The focus on cyber sovereignty, as emphasised in China’s Five-Year Plans, is about ensuring the internet is governed in a manner that respects the sovereignty of all nations, promoting peace and stability in cyberspace.
Accusations and fear mongering by the U.S. and its allies should be seen in a critical light.
Ultimately they serve to undermine cooperation and escalate tensions unnecessarily.
The Volt Typhoon saga demonstrates how the U.S. government exploits fear and misinformation to advance its agenda, and in this particular case, of conjuring a phantom menace to further justify the erosion of civil liberties. If we are to be responsible global citizens, we must demand facts, not fear mongering.
China has been transparent in refuting the baseless Volt Typhoon allegations, while the U.S. has failed to provide credible evidence to support its claims.
Rather than repeat the folly of the Cold War with an Arms race in cyberspace, it is imperative to approach cybersecurity with a balanced view, recognising that the real threats to global cyber stability often come from those accusing others of misdeeds.
That Australian-US cooperation in Quantum Computing has been sold on the basis of its “Manhattan Project” scale importance isn’t reassuring.
The international community must demand transparency and accountability from all nations, including the United States, to ensure a secure and cooperative cyberspace. Only through mutual understanding and respect for national sovereignty can we hope to achieve lasting peace and security in the digital age.
https://johnmenadue.com/the-geopolitics-of-cyber-espionage/
While the US continues to make accusations that the so-called “China state-sponsored cyber actor,” or “Volt Typhoon” remains active, an Australian expert wrote in an article that the US has failed to provide credible evidence to support its claims. The expert argues that these accusations serve as a smokescreen to divert attention from the US hegemon's extensive and unparalleled global surveillance apparatus. Experts said that the US’ false narrative about China has even raised concerns among certain groups in Western countries.
During a hacking conference in Las Vegas from August 8 to August 11, some US experts and US officials continued to hype the Volt Typhoon issue. For example, Sherrod DeGrippo, director of threat intelligence strategy at Microsoft, said that “Volt Typhoon is active to this day… Have they stopped? Absolutely not. Will they stop? Doubt it,” according to media reports.
On Thursday, Kari McKern, a retired career public servant, librarian and IT specialist who lives in Sydney, Australia, published an article titled “The geopolitics of cyber espionage” on an Australian platform named “Pearls and Irritations,” in which she noted that the “Volt Typhoon” threat was mostly a work of fiction, crafted by US intelligence agencies to win public support and pressure policymakers to allow the extension of invasive US surveillance powers.
McKern said that the timing of the Volt Typhoon announcement coincided with the debates over the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Section 702 reauthorization. The actual goal of the announcement was more to influence the debate in favor of preserving surveillance powers, as the US Congress deliberated renewing the controversial Section 702.
This provision allows US agencies to collect data on foreign targets without warrants, inevitably capturing the communications of millions of American citizens. As the expiration of Section 702 loomed, Western media outlets began amplifying claims from the FBI and NSA about an imminent “Chinese hacking” threat, spinning tales of Volt Typhoon infiltrating critical infrastructure, according to McKern.
“The message was clear: renew broad spying powers or leave the nation vulnerable to a devious Chinese plot,” McKern wrote in the article.
McKern also wrote in her article that information in the public arena supports the Chinese claim that the US has constructed a formidable “hacker empire,” using its technological prowess to spy on adversaries and allies alike.
Rather than repeat the folly of the Cold War with an arms race in cyberspace, it is imperative to approach cybersecurity with a balanced view, recognizing that the real threats to global cyber stability often come from those accusing others of misdeeds, said McKern.
At the end of the article, she said that the international community must demand transparency and accountability from all nations, including the United States, to ensure a secure and cooperative cyberspace. “Only through mutual understanding and respect for national sovereignty can we hope to achieve lasting peace and security in the digital age.”
Some foreign experts, based on their understanding of US cyber behavior and professional knowledge, also have a correct judgment of the "Volt Typhoon" false narrative. "The global cyber espionage activities exposed by Snowden and Assange have already caused the US to lose its credibility in the field of cybersecurity," Zhuo Hua, an international affairs expert at the School of International Relations and Diplomacy of Beijing Foreign Studies University, told the Global Times.
McKern’s article showed that the US’ false narrative about China has raised concerns among certain groups in Western countries. If the US wants to continue creating a narrative targeting China, it will become increasingly difficult for the US,” said Zhuo.
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202408/1318188.shtml
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YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.