Australia mandates that major technology firms pay for news content or face a 2.25% tax on local revenue. The policy aims to address the financial imbalance between digital platforms and domestic media outlets.
The Australian government is mandating that major technology companies compensate news organizations for content or face a penalty tax of 2.25% of their local revenue.
Quick reaction
One tap helps tune what we surface next.
Reader discussion
Public commentsNo comments yet. Start the discussion around this signal.
Follow this signal
Get updates on this story
We will email you if this changes materially. No spam. Daily brief optional.
Map context
Open map near Australia
Keep the story in context with nearby live signals, countries, and category movement.
Related coverage
More story pages
CISA adds critical WebPros cPanel and WHM authentication vulnerability CVE-2026-41940 to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog. The agency urges users to review the updated list for security guidance.
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has added a critical authentication vulnerability in WebPros cPanel, WHM, and WP2, tracked as CVE-2026-41940, to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Catalog.
The Irish Supreme Court rules that TikTok may continue EU-China data transfers while the company pursues an appeal of a prior legal decision.
The Irish Supreme Court has ruled that TikTok may continue transferring data between the EU and China while the company appeals a previous legal decision.
Anti-ICE platform GTFO Get the Facilities Out exposes data of nearly 18,000 users following an API vulnerability. The site, founded by former DHS Chief of Staff Miles Taylor, left sensitive sign-up information publicly accessible.
An API vulnerability on the anti-ICE website 'GTFO Get the Facilities Out,' founded by former DHS Chief of Staff Miles Taylor, has exposed the personal data of approximately 18,000 users.
US and Chinese economic officials call for deeper trade cooperation ahead of President Donald Trump's visit to China in mid-May.
Senior economic officials and trade negotiators from China and the United States have called for increased cooperation to stabilize bilateral relations ahead of President Donald Trump's scheduled visit to China in mid-May.
More live signals
Continue with the live feed.
The fastest nearby updates load from the public feed, not the enriched story endpoint.