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Page 57 - பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் தொழில்நுட்பம் சிட்னி News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Byron Baes backlash: Netflix holds crisis talks with Byron Bay officials

Netflix has gone into damage control amid an uproar over its proposed new reality TV series Byron Baes. Nick O Donnell, the streaming giant s director of public policy, recently travelled to the NSW town for crisis talks with stakeholders as the backlash continues to grow. The executive s itinerary included a meeting with Byron Shire s outspoken mayor, Simon Richardson, according to The Sydney Morning Herald. Unpopular: Netflix has gone into damage control amid an uproar over its proposed new reality TV series Byron Baes, with director of public policy Nick O’Donnell travelling to the NSW coastal town for crisis talks with stakeholders , including Mayor Simon Richardson (pictured)

Keypath Education considers $1b-plus float; drafts in Macquarie

Keypath Education considers $1b-plus float; drafts in Macquarie Save Share Keypath counts local institutions like UNSW as partners.  Tamara Dean Street Talk can reveal the company – which launched in Victoria in 2014 – has drafted in Macquarie Capital’s investment bankers to help prepare it for life on the ASX boards. Fund manager sources said the Silver Donut’s bankers had taken Keypath on a non-deal roadshow over the past couple of weeks, to familiarise funds with the company, its management, and its story. Potential investors said the company expected $US91 million ($117 million) revenue in the 2021 financial year, and increasing to $US116 million in FY22.

Divide and conquer? New insights from the ancients of the microscopic world

Coronavirus Australia: Why impatience over vaccines and borders will divide Australia

Advertisement On Monday night, as Prime Minister Scott Morrison was telling the Fullerton Hotel ballroom how chardonnay sippers at inner-city wine bars would not deliver net zero emissions, his audience of business community luminaries consisted mostly of friends and allies. But beneath the surface there was a simmering tension: the impact the slow vaccine rollout would inevitably have on Australia’s economy and its reopening to the world. Prime Minister Scott Morrison at the Business Council of Australia’s annual dinner last week. Credit:Wolter Peeters Morrison’s host, the Business Council of Australia, had already warned in its budget submission that being too risk-averse would result in talent and capital going to other countries. “We cannot allow our success to become our Achilles heel,” it said in its March submission, before the rollout debacle was fully realised.

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