Anonymous
ID: rJ78GnqP
7/15/2025, 10:45:16 AM No.510431781
Evening gents.
>A worker is recovering in hospital after he was allegedly stabbed in the neck while trying to stop a knife-wielding man outside a Melbourne shopping centre.
https://archive.md/s0Tj4
>A Muslim man has been arrested after allegedly stabbing another man in the neck at a Melbourne shopping centre and yelling โAllahu Akbarโ.
https://www.noticer.news/moonee-ponds-melbourne-stabbing-allahu-akbar/
>Offshore wind companies cool Australian interest as public investment considered
https://archive.md/TPmxK
>When the people running Australiaโs teen social media tech trial claimed their testing proved the technology can work effectively, the trialโs experts wondered why they hadnโt seen the proof.
>After being underway for the better part of a year, the government-commissioned Age Assurance Technology Trial last month published a list of 12 conclusions. It had broad statements such as โage assurance can be done in Australia and can be private, robust and effectiveโ, but did not include evidence backing them up. The supporting data was set to come in a report later this year.
>Now, a privately circulated draft of the report has left some of the experts involved questioning whether the initial โpreliminary findingsโ were overstated โ and whether the trialโs claims are verging on misrepresentation.
https://archive.md/GcVeL
>A worker is recovering in hospital after he was allegedly stabbed in the neck while trying to stop a knife-wielding man outside a Melbourne shopping centre.
https://archive.md/s0Tj4
>A Muslim man has been arrested after allegedly stabbing another man in the neck at a Melbourne shopping centre and yelling โAllahu Akbarโ.
https://www.noticer.news/moonee-ponds-melbourne-stabbing-allahu-akbar/
>Offshore wind companies cool Australian interest as public investment considered
https://archive.md/TPmxK
>When the people running Australiaโs teen social media tech trial claimed their testing proved the technology can work effectively, the trialโs experts wondered why they hadnโt seen the proof.
>After being underway for the better part of a year, the government-commissioned Age Assurance Technology Trial last month published a list of 12 conclusions. It had broad statements such as โage assurance can be done in Australia and can be private, robust and effectiveโ, but did not include evidence backing them up. The supporting data was set to come in a report later this year.
>Now, a privately circulated draft of the report has left some of the experts involved questioning whether the initial โpreliminary findingsโ were overstated โ and whether the trialโs claims are verging on misrepresentation.
https://archive.md/GcVeL
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