Jewel Topsfield11:18, Jul 04 2021
JASON SOUTH/Sydney Morning Herald
Belinda, 10, is already comfortable interacting with artificial intelligence.
If Siri had any feelings she would know she was being affectionately teased. When 10-year-old Belinda and her friends have a play date they sometimes pepper Siri with questions in the hope she will say something random and make them laugh. “Do a rap,” they urge Siri. “Tell us a bedtime story.” “The stories and raps are very funny, because they don’t make sense,” Belinda says. “So it’s like a duck went up to a store, the duck came back from the store, you went to school the next day and stuff like that.”
What comes after Generation Z? Alpha, of course
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The 2021 financial year: ‘It’s been a mixed bag’
Today marks the start of a new financial year, and the end of the first full financial year Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) listed companies have had dealing with COVID-19, closed borders, lockdowns and more.
Here, the Mumbrella team takes a look at the highs and lows of the past 12 months for listed advertising, marketing, media and research companies.
July 1, 2021 9:55
by MUMBRELLA TEAM
For the most part the Australian economy has weathered the pandemic relatively well, thanks to unprecedented monetary and fiscal policy stimulus, and resilient consumer confidence. The Australian sharemarket went up 24% the past 12 months, however, not all businesses have bounced back from the turmoil simultaneously.
Date Time
Channel Nine breaches political advertising rules
Swan Television & Radio Broadcasters Pty Limited (Nine Network) has breached the rules for broadcasting political advertising by not properly identifying to the audience who had authorised the advertisement.
An Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) investigation found that the required information in an ad for the Western Australian Labor party was correct and present in the written form, but the speed at which it was spoken made the information unclear to the point of being unintelligible.
ACMA Chair Nerida O’Loughlin said anyone listening would not reasonably be able to understand who authorised the political ad.
Nine Network breached political advertising rules finds ACMA
July 1, 2021 10:40
The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA), has found Nine Network to have breached the rules for broadcasting political advertising, by not adequately identifying to the audience who had authorised the advertisement following an investigation.
The investigation found that the information required for a political advertisement run by the Western Australian Labor party was correct and present in the written form, however the speed it was spoken at made “the information unclear to the point of being unintelligible”.
ACMA chair, Nerida O’Loughlin said that those listening would not reasonably be able to understand who authorised the advertisement.
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