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22 Jul 2025   
  
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Financial support considered for greyhound trainers and owners when industry ends
In December the government announced the practice would be banned in New Zealand after ongoing concerns about animal welfare and three reviews into the industry. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 7:55am 

Listen live: NZ and allies condemn 'inhumane', 'horrifying' killings in Gaza and 'drip feeding' of aid
"We condemn the drip feeding of aid and the inhumane killing of civilians, including children, seeking to meet their most basic needs," the statement from 25 countries says. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 7:55am 

Time to address the lunacy
Watch as I break New Zealand's aviation regulations with nothing more than a sheet of A4 paper. Do I risk a fine (or worse)? 
© 2025 Aardvark 7:45am 

ACC grapples with long-term claims
ACC is facing mounting pressure as long-term weekly compensation claims climb sharply, well ahead of population growth. 
© 2025 Good Returns 7:45am 

Pacific security and health leaders pledge cooperation
But public health experts say that law enforcement are undermining efforts to combat the drug-driven spread of HIV in Fiji, putting the wider region at risk. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 7:15am 

Flying Fijians coach 'really annoyed' by PNC prep time, squad limits
Mick Byrne says short preparation time and smaller squads in the Pacific Nations Cup are two key issues that continue to affect Fiji, Samoa and Tonga. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 7:15am 

Leka Halasima: Who is the Warriors star lighting up the NRL in his rookie season?
The 19-year-old is on track to becoming the Warriors' latest cult hero. 
© 2025 NZ Herald 7:15am 

New Zealand businesses urged to prepare for pay secrecy law
New Zealand businesses are urged to prepare for new law banning pay secrecy clauses, promoting transparency and equality in employee remuneration. 
© 2025 ITBrief 7:05am 

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Crash on SH20A causes major delays to Auckland Airport traffic
The right southbound lane is blocked just past the Kirkbride Rd off-ramp. 
© 2025 NZ Herald 7:05am 

Advocacy group says vape product testing urgently needs to be increased
It follows a recall notice for Suntree - Vanilla Cream, which contains too much of a chemical associated with 'popcorn lung' disease. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 6:55am 

Defence spoke to tech company behind US-Mexico border security towers
Meanwhile the government also wants to up its own game in supplying international markets with high-tech military systems. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 6:55am 


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Rugby league: Siosiua Taukeiaho puts hand up for Tonga
The forrmer Mate Ma'a Tonga player has revealed he wants to have another shot with the Tongan national rugby league team. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 7:55am 

Surely Willis already knows why butter costs what it costs, says Labour. Not so, she says
Willis’ office says her six years at the Fonterra does not mean she has prior understanding of its pricing strategy, and rejects her public comments about the dairy giant equate to “targeting”. 
© 2025 7:45am 

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Queen Elizabeth II's fashion to feature in exhibit
The story of the late Queen's life will be told through her clothes at a Buckingham Palace exhibition. 
© 2025 BBCWorld 7:35am 

Fonterra's 6K low-emitting farmers set to benefit from Mars, Nestlé funds
Around 6000 farms were estimated to qualify for a $1500 reimbursement for an on-farm emissions reduction tool this season. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 7:15am 

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Specialist education staff strike over pay and conditions
The 1300 staff include behaviour and communication support workers, psychologists and special education advisers. 
© 2025 RadioNZ 7:15am 

England cricket team hires the All Blacks’ ‘no d...heads’ guru
Brendon McCullum has turned to the Kiwi mental skills coach as he looks to give England a harder edge amid a tetchy test series against India. 
© 2025 Stuff.co.nz 7:15am 

A U.S. startup is selling your stolen data to anyone with $50
When you imagine personal data stolen on the internet, like your address, phone number, internet history, or even passwords, you probably think of hackers passing it to identity thieves. Maybe you think of cops getting their hands on it in less-than-legal ways, or maybe an insurance company spying on its customers. But apparently anyone can buy this data, from a U.S. company, for as little as $50. That company is Farnsworth Intelligence, an “open-source intel” startup from 23-year-old founder Aidan Raney. And it’s not being coy about what it’s doing. The company’s primary consumer-level product is called “Infostealers,” and it’s hosted at Infostealers.info. (Yup, what a URL.) According to an exposé from 404 Media, a simple purchase starting at fifty bucks can get you access to a searchable database of personal data from people all over the United States and the world. And this isn’t just the usual stuff you could find on the various “people pages” sites, the somewhat scummy descendants of the Yellow Pages. No, this is information apparently sourced directly from data breaches, stolen from companies and services in ways that just about every country considers a crime. There’s a full suite of data available for perusing, up to and including the auto-fill addresses you stick into your browser so you don’t have to type them into every new store. Farnsaworth Intelligence’s primary public-facing info search tool is called “Infostealers.info.”Farnsworth Intelligence But it goes even deeper. Farnsworth Intelligence’s more powerful Infostealer Data Platform product will serve up private data that includes usernames and passwords. Yes, again, the actual product is called “Infostealer.” This feature isn’t available to just anyone…but it is available to anyone who can provide a compelling reason. The list of apparently legitimate use cases Farnsworth accepts includes “private investigations, intelligence, journalism, law enforcement, cyber security, compliance, IP/brand protection.” There’s no mention of a warrant necessary to access this stolen information. Farnsworth’s public-facing sight seems almost gleefully eager to declare its ability to collect information via less-than-legitimate means. “We are renown [sic] for our human intelligence capabilities, having successfully infiltrated a North Korean laptop farm through social engineering techniques and succesfully [sic] extracting intelligence that saved companies millions of dollars,” declares a promo blurb. Farnsworth says this information can be used for “corporate due diligence,” “enhanced background checks,” and “advanced asset searches.” Exactly how Farnsworth procures its trillions of data points is not disclosed. It’s easy enough to find stolen personal info, since hardly a week goes by without a database of millions of users making its way onto the dark web. And there are legitimate reasons for people to find and catalog those databases, like security companies alerting their customers when their passwords have been leaked. But brazenly selling stolen information on the open market, especially when there are so many companies, governments, and other state-level actors that can use it to do harm, seems incredibly callous. And it’s worth pointing out that evidence obtained illegally is generally inadmissible in a criminal prosecution. But that wouldn’t stop, say, an abusive ex from tracking down their victim’s most recent address. There are plenty of other ways for illegally obtained information to be used to hurt people. I’m sure I don’t have to draw you a picture of why groups of vulnerable people who are already targeted wouldn’t want it to be searchable by private investigators or government agents, with nothing more than a credit card. I’m a technology journalist. I don’t have the authority to declare behavior like this legal or illegal, and my employer’s lawyers would probably tackle me if I tried. But as a human being, I can point out that collecting private, stolen information, then selling it to anyone without a thought for what further damage it might cause, is the epitome of sociopathic greed. “It would be illegal and unethical to sell stolen cell phones even if you didn’t steal them yourself, and I don’t see how this is any different,” said Cooper Quintin of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. 404 Media requested comment from both Farnsworth Intelligence and its founder, and received no response. I highly recommend reading 404 Media’s original report for the full scope of the situation. 
© 2025 PC World 7:05am 

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