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      Craig Goodwin headlines Socceroos’ dominant victory over Lebanon

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 26 March - 11:02

    • Australia defeat Cedars 5-0 in second World Cup qualifier
    • First international goals for Kusini Yengi and John Iredale

    It was an evening in which Craig Goodwin reaffirmed his status as one of the Socceroos’ most important attacking outlets, with two goals and two “in spirit” assists in his side’s 5-0 win over Lebanon. A performance that, again, left one wondering how his pinpoint delivery or ability to pile-up goals and assists hadn’t seen him establish himself in this Socceroos outfit before he was the wrong side of 30, or how he was never to establish a sustained European career.

    It was a night in which Kusini Yengi and John Iredale celebrated their first international goals for their country. In just his second international game, Iredale couldn’t hold the tears back as he was enveloped in a bearhug by Jackson Irvine after turning in a cross from Patrick Yazbek at the back post, just minutes after the 21-year-old provider had stepped on to the park to become Socceroo No 641.

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      Australia v Lebanon: World Cup 2026 qualifier – live

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 26 March - 10:27

    That’s the perfect start for Australia – not just the goal but the identity of the scorer. Goodwin made a good run down the left and curled a quite unplayable first-time cross into the six-yard box. Yengi’s first shot hit the post but it rebounded off his left shin and into the net.

    Kusini Yengi gets his first international goal!

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      Australia v Lebanon: World Cup qualifier – live

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 21 March - 08:33

    • Socceroos play the Cedars in Sydney in first of two matches
    • Kick-off at CommBank Stadium is 8.10pm AEDT / 11.10am EET
    • Any thoughts? Email or Tweet @JPHowcroft

    Hello everybody and welcome to live coverage of Australia v Lebanon from CommBank Stadium. Kick-off in Sydney for this 2026 World Cup qualifier is 8.10pm AEDT.

    It’s been a while, so let’s quickly recap.

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      Apple Joins Hollywood & Netflix on a Pirate Site Blocking Trip to Oz

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 18 March - 19:37 · 3 minutes

    kangaroo-oz Unless they already have links to existing platforms or can somehow benefit from traffic previously destined for a popular preexisting domain, most new pirate sites aren’t overnight success stories.

    In a saturated market where most innovation takes place behind the scenes, if it happens at all, the next big thing may struggle to make any kind of serious impression. When dozens, even hundreds of similar platforms are already offering the same content, presented in a broadly similar way, potentially via the same interface, evidence of success may take months or even years to appear.

    Popular in Months, Blocked Many, Many Months Later

    In 2024, the most obvious outward indication of success for many sites is being placed on various rightsholder-maintained blocklists; they reward a site’s success or recognize its potential by stymieing further progress through the use of mostly regional ISP blockades. Australia has been methodically dealing with locally-significant sites in this manner since 2015, and via a more robust system since 2018.

    Legislation has been developed to permit DNS and/or IP address blocking within a flexible ‘dynamic injunction’ framework, but when reading through an injunction signed off by Justice Nicholas at the Federal Court this week, it’s evident just how quickly things can change.

    The original application was filed on November 9, 2023, headed up by local companies Roadshow Films and Village Roadshow Films, plus Disney, Paramount Pictures, Columbia Pictures, Universal City Studios, Warner Bros., plus affiliates Netflix Studios and Netflix Worldwide Entertainment. The respondents in the matter, dozens of local ISPs operating under Telstra, Optus, TPG Telecom, Aussie Broadband, iiNet, Vodafone, and other branding, were asked to block over 30 pirate sites operating under dozens of different domains.

    The sites include: bayofpirates, proxygalaxy, tvbayoplus, haitu, watch-free, bbmovies, wcoanimedubbedonline, 6movies, animeflv, hdwatch, 9movies, seriesonlinehd, soap2dayhd, 123moviesfree, watchmovies, movieshd, gogoanime, animepahe, losmovies, 4anime, extratorrents, limetorrents, nivod4, aniwatch, kissanime, and watchcartoononline

    After years of tuning the process is now well understood, and there’s little to no opposition from anyone since the criteria for blocking speaks for itself. However, after four months of ensuring the paperwork is correct, the list itself is predictably in need of an update.

    Since dynamic injunctions are flexible, there’s nothing that can’t be fixed, but even after being identified in some cases by their main domains and several alternatives, targets continue to move. Aniwatch stands out as a site known by millions, yet just a few weeks before the application was made it was called Zoro.to. Today, after yet another change, it operates from HiAnime.to .

    Gogoanime, on the other hand, laughs in the face of such consistency. Currently operating from anitaku.to and gogoanime3.co, the last round of switches featured gogoanimehd.io and gogoanime3.net. And since it doesn’t matter how many times a site changes its domain, or if other similar domains are even operated by the same people, gogoanimex.to, gogoanime.video, gogoanime.sk, .tel, news, .bid, .ar, and all the others , can now be blocked in Australia regardless.

    The studios have to compensate the ISPs for initial blocking at the rate of AUS$50 per domain (US$33), and then another AUS$50 per domain after that. Pirate sites could try to bleed the studios dry by maintaining a more vigorous domain-switching pace but as strategies go, there have been better ones; blocking carried out as part of this order will continue for three years, minimum.

    The Second Blocking Bus Has Apple on Board

    apple-blocked The second application worthy of mention today was filed on March 13, 2024, and is unfortunately so new that precise details of the application are yet to be made available.

    Until the real documents appear, we’ve put together the details of the request in a document available below. It features all the usual ISPs, the usual local rightsholders, plus members of the MPA including Netflix.

    But perhaps the most interesting rightsholder is new arrival Apple Video Programming LLC, which owns the rights to Apple+ shows including Silo and Criminal Record, among many others, mostly exclusives .

    The blocking order related to the November 2023 application is available here (pdf)

    The application filed on March 13, 2024, featuring Apple hasn’t been made available yet so, in the meantime, the basic details can be found here (pdf)

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      pubsub.blastersklan.com / slashdot · Sunday, 11 February - 12:50 edit · 1 minute

    An anonymous reader shared this report from the New York Times When it's after hours, and the boss is on the line, Australian workers — already among the world's best-rested and most personally fulfilled employees — can soon press "decline" in favor of the seductive call of the beach. In yet another buttress against the scourge of overwork, Australia's Senate on Thursday passed a bill giving workers the right to ignore calls and messages outside of working hours without fear of repercussion. It will now return to the House of Representatives for final approval. The bill, expected to pass in the House with ease, will let Australian workers refuse "unreasonable" professional communication outside of the workday. Workplaces that punish employees for not responding to such demands could be fined. "Someone who is not being paid 24 hours a day shouldn't be penalized if they're not online and available 24 hours a day," Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said at a news conference Wednesday... Australia follows in the footsteps of European nations such as France, which in 2017 introduced the right of workers to disconnect from employers while off duty, a move later emulated by Germany, Italy and Belgium. The European Parliament has also called for a law across the European Union that would alleviate the pressure on workers to answer communications off the clock... Australians already enjoy a host of standardized benefits, including 20 days of paid annual leave, mandatory paid sick leave, "long service" leave of six weeks for those who have remained at an employer for at least seven years, 18 weeks of paid maternity leave and a nationwide minimum wage of about $15 an hour.

    Read more of this story at Slashdot.

    New Australian Law Will Give Workers 'Right to Disconnect'
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      This post is public

      it.slashdot.org /story/24/02/11/0515215/new-australian-law-will-give-workers-right-to-disconnect

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      Biden Keeps Australia’s Dinner Low-Key at a Moment of Global Turmoil

      news.movim.eu / TheNewYorkTimes · Thursday, 26 October - 03:10


    Before the state dinner was over, President Biden had stepped out for a briefing on a mass shooting in Maine and to call lawmakers in the state. He left shortly after 10 p.m.
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      The Full Guest List for Biden’s State Dinner With Australia

      news.movim.eu / TheNewYorkTimes · Wednesday, 25 October - 23:21


    The Bidens invited more than 300 guests, including business leaders, musicians, athletes and prominent Australian Americans.
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      State Dinner to Bring Together Biden, Australia’s Leader and the B-52s

      news.movim.eu / TheNewYorkTimes · Tuesday, 24 October - 21:11


    President Biden will welcome Anthony Albanese, the prime minister of Australia, for meetings and a state dinner in Washington.
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      Varda looks to Australia after delays in obtaining US reentry approval

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 19 October, 2023 - 21:15

    Artist's illustration of Varda's reentry capsule.

    Enlarge / Artist's illustration of Varda's reentry capsule. (credit: Varda Space Industries)

    Varda Space Industries says it has reached an agreement with a private range operator in Australia for spacecraft landings as early as next year after the US government declined to grant approval for the reentry of Varda's first experimental mission carrying pharmaceuticals manufactured in orbit.

    After years of applications, reviews, and discussion, the Federal Aviation Administration and the US Air Force would not clear Varda's spacecraft to land at a military test range in the Utah desert last month. An Air Force spokesperson told Ars it did not grant approval for the landing "due to the overall safety, risk, and impact analysis."

    Likewise, the FAA denied Varda's application for a commercial reentry license in early September. Varda's first small satellite mission launched The company's leaders say they are still working with the FAA and the Air Force in hopes of getting the spacecraft back to Earth in Utah in the coming months, but now they're looking at other options for future missions.

    Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments