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Qantas data breach expected to affect 6 million airline customers

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Tabby Wilson

BBC News, Sydney

Reuters Four planes are lined up in a row on the tarmac of an aiport, each with the Qantas logo of a stylized white kangaroo on a red background emblazoned on the tail. Reuters

The airline says there will be no impact to Qantas’ operations

Qantas is contacting customers after a cyber attack targeted their third-party customer service platform.

On 30 June, the Australian airline detected “unusual activity” on a platform used by its contact centre to store the data of six million people, including names, email addresses, phone numbers, birth dates and frequent flyer numbers.

Upon detection of the breach, Qantas took “immediate steps and contained the system”, according to a statement.

The company is still investigating the full extent of the breach, but says it is expecting the proportion of data stolen to be “significant”.

It has assured the public that passport details, credit card details and personal financial information were not held in the breached system, and no frequent flyer accounts, passwords or PIN numbers have been compromised.

Qantas has notified the Australian Federal Police of the breach, as well as the Australian Cyber Security Centre and the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner.

“We sincerely apologise to our customers and we recognise the uncertainty this will cause,” said Qantas Group CEO Vanessa Hudson.

She asked customers to call the dedicated support line if they had concerns, and confirmed that there would be no impact to Qantas’ operations or the safety of the airline.

The attack comes just days after the FBI issued an alert on X warning that the airline sector was a target of cyber criminal group Scattered Spider.

US-based Hawaiian Airlines and Canada’s WestJet have both been impacted by similar cyber attacks in the past two weeks.

BBC revealed that the group has also been the key focus of an investigation into the wave of cyber attacks on UK retailers, including M&S.

The Qantas breach is the latest in a string of Australian data breaches this year, with AustralianSuper and Nine Media suffering significant leaks in the past few months.

In March 2025, the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) released statistics revealing that 2024 was the worst year for data breaches in Australia since records began in 2018.

“The trends we are observing suggest the threat of data breaches, especially through the efforts of malicious actors, is unlikely to diminish,” said Australian Privacy Commissioner Carly Kind in a statement from the OAIC.

Ms Kind urged businesses and government agencies to step up security measures and data protection, and highlighted that both the private and public sectors are vulnerable to cyber attacks.

Britain’s attempts to join pan-European trading bloc blocked by EU

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British government hopes of joining a pan-European trade area to reduce post-Brexit supply chain challenges for UK goods exporters are being blocked by Brussels, according to officials on both sides.

The UK announced it was considering whether to join the Pan-Euro-Mediterranean (PEM) convention as part of its new trade strategy published last week, arguing it could help boost the UK’s flagging goods exports.

However, the European Commission has made clear to the UK that it would not currently support such a move, according to four people familiar with discussions, in a move the officials acknowledged had “frustrated” London. 

The blockage is the first sign of friction between the UK and EU since the two sides announced a “reset” of their relationship at a summit on May 18, promising to improve energy trading arrangements and sign a so-called veterinary agreement to remove checks on agrifood exports. 

The PEM convention is an agreement between the EU and 20 other countries in Africa and the Middle East that allows inputs for manufacturing supply chains to be sourced across multiple countries in order to qualify for low-tariff access to markets under free trade agreements.

Joining PEM is a move supported by UK trade groups, including the British Chambers of Commerce. According to the UK’s trade strategy published last week it could reduce “complex paperwork” and “increase flexibility for UK exporters where they source their inputs”.

EU officials familiar with the discussion said the Commission had decided that the UK joining PEM was not currently in the EU’s interests, because it would increase the risk of products unfairly qualifying for low-tariff access to the bloc.

Sir Keir Starmer has ruled out rejoining the EU single market or re-entering into a customs union with the EU, but industry has pushed the government to consider joining the PEM convention as an interim step to help goods exporters.

Trade experts said the UK would need EU co-operation to join the convention because it would require rewriting the terms of the existing post-Brexit EU-UK trade deal — even though the PEM is not exclusively an EU arrangement.

“For it to be meaningful for the UK, the EU would need to agree to incorporate the PEM rules of origin into the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement. This gives the EU de facto blocking powers,” said Sam Lowe, trade lead at consultancy Flint Global.

Brussels indicated previously that it was open to the UK joining PEM, but has since gone cold on the idea, arguing that it wants to stick closely to the agreements proposed in the “common understanding” set out between the two sides at the May 18 summit.

In 2023, PEM was mooted as a solution to a stand-off over post-Brexit tariffs on electric vehicles, while as recently as January this year EU trade commissioner Maroš Šefčovič said was something the EU “could consider”.

David Henig, a former UK trade negotiator now at the ECIPE think-tank, said the EU Commission’s reluctance demonstrated the ongoing political challenge of repairing relations with the bloc.

“The EU isn’t united on the importance of the UK reset and issues like PEM can easily be caught up in this even though technically straightforward,” he said. “The UK government is going to have to work hard in London and Brussels to build momentum.”

Separately, in another point of tension, the EU is still demanding full implementation of the Windsor framework deal on Northern Ireland ahead of any veterinary agreement that would remove the need for most checks on goods crossing the Irish Sea. 

The final phase of the Windsor framework deal came into force on July 1. M&S boss Stuart Machin last week described the implementation as “bureaucratic madness”, saying it requires 1,000 products to have “not for EU” labels, and 400 more will have to undergo full customs checks.

Machin added the promised EU-UK veterinary agreement “can’t come soon enough,” but EU officials said the Commission was being “very firm” on the point that the deal must be fully implemented ahead of any EU-UK veterinary agreement.

Industry insiders said that European relations minister Nick Thomas-Symonds had called supermarkets to a meeting in Whitehall last Thursday to urge them to comply with the deal or risk jeopardising talks over the veterinary agreement. 

The EU has repeatedly raised concerns that many big UK supermarkets are not fully complying with the rules. 

The Commission did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The UK government said it was committed to full implementation of the Windsor framework and would review the merits of joining PEM through engagement with the trading group’s members, including the EU.

“We aren’t going to provide a running commentary on our ongoing discussions with the EU,” the Cabinet Office added.

US university prohibits transgender athletes following pressure from Trump administration | LGBTQ News

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University of Pennsylvania erases records set by trans swimmer as part of resolution to civil rights investigation.

A top university in the United States has agreed to bar transgender athletes from women’s sports and erase records set by a prominent trans swimmer following pressure from the administration of President Donald Trump.

The University of Pennsylvania (UPenn) and the US Department of Education announced the agreement on Tuesday to resolve a federal civil rights investigation focused on transgender swimmer Lia Thomas.

Thomas, who was born male and came out as a trans woman in 2018, won a National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I title in 2022, becoming the first trans athlete to accomplish the feat.

Thomas, who began hormone replacement therapy in 2019 as part of the transition from male to female, also set UPenn records in five women’s events, including the 100-metre and 500-metre freestyle competitions.

Thomas’s accomplishments became a focal point in the debate about fairness in sport, with LGBTQ campaigners hailing the swimmer’s participation as a victory for inclusion and critics, including some of Thomas’s teammates, casting it as an attack on women’s rights.

Larry Jameson, UPenn’s president, said in a statement that the university recognised that some student athletes had been disadvantaged by the NCAA eligibility rules that had been in place at the time of Thomas’s participation.

The NCAA changed its eligibility rules to limit participation in women’s events to female-born athletes in March, following Trump’s executive order denying funding to educational institutions that allow trans girls and women to compete.

“We recognize this and will apologize to those who experienced a competitive disadvantage or experienced anxiety because of the policies in effect at the time,” Jameson said.

“We will review and update the Penn women’s swimming records set during that season to indicate who would now hold the records under current eligibility guidelines.”

UPenn later on Tuesday removed Thomas from its website’s list of “All-Time School Records”, and added a note stating that Thomas set records during the 2021-22 season under “eligibility rules in effect at the time”.

UPenn’s move comes after the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights in April announced that it had determined the university to have violated Title IX by “permitting males to compete in women’s intercollegiate athletics and to occupy women-only intimate facilities”.

US Education Secretary Linda McMahon called the agreement a “great victory for women and girls”.

“The Department commends UPenn for rectifying its past harms against women and girls, and we will continue to fight relentlessly to restore Title IX’s proper application and enforce it to the fullest extent of the law,” McMahon said in a statement.

Human Rights Campaign and GLAAD, two of the biggest LGBTQ advocacy organisations in the US, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

UPenn’s announcement is the latest in a series of moves to limit trans people’s participation in sport in the US and elsewhere since Trump returned to the White House in January.

In March, World Athletics said it would require participants in women’s events to undergo DNA testing to prove their biological sex.

Opinion polls have pointed to growing public opposition to trans women and girls competing against female-born athletes.

In a New York Times/Ipsos poll published in January, 79 percent of Americans said that trans women should be barred from female sports, up from 62 percent in 2021.

KKR acquires Australian chicken grower ProTen from Aware Super

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KKR to acquire Australian chicken grower ProTen from Aware Super

Israel has accepted terms for 60-day Gaza truce, according to Trump

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Israel has agreed to the “necessary conditions” to finalise a 60-day ceasefire in Gaza, US President Donald Trump has said.

During the proposed deal, “we will work with all parties to end the War”, Trump said in a post on Truth Social, without detailing what the conditions are.

“The Qataris and Egyptians, who have worked very hard to help bring Peace, will deliver this final proposal. I hope… that Hamas takes this Deal, because it will not get better — IT WILL ONLY GET WORSE,” Trump wrote.

Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza after Hamas’s 7 October, 2023 attack on Israel, in which around 1,200 people were killed. At least 56,647 have been killed in Gaza since then, according to the territory’s Hamas-run health ministry.

It was not immediately clear whether Hamas would accept the conditions of the ceasefire.

Trump’s announcement comes before a meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu scheduled for next week, in which the US president has said he would be “very firm”.

The US president said on Tuesday that he believed Netanyahu wanted to end hostilities in Gaza.

“He wants to. I can tell you he wants to. I think we’ll have a deal next week,” Trump added.

On Tuesday, Israel’s Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer was due to meet US special envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Vice President JD Vance in Washington.

Last week, a senior Hamas official told the BBC mediators have increased efforts to broker a new ceasefire and hostage release deal in Gaza, but that negotiations with Israel remain stalled.

Israel has said the conflict can only end when Hamas has been completely dismantled. Hamas has long called for a permanent truce and a complete Israeli withdrawal from Gaza.

Around 50 Israeli hostages are still in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive.

Trump’s comments come shortly after Israel ordered evacuations in northern Gaza ahead of increased military action. At least 20 Palestinians were killed in an Israeli air strike on a seafront cafe in Gaza City on Monday, according to medics and eyewitnesses.

The Israeli military this week also said it was examining reports of civilians being “harmed” while approaching aid distribution centres in Gaza run by the US- and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF).

More than 170 charities and other NGOs have called for the controversial group to be shut down. Organisations like Oxfam and Save the Children say Israeli forces “routinely” open fire on Palestinians seeking aid.

Israel denies this accusation and says the organisation is necessary to bypass Hamas interference in aid distribution.

In March, a previous ceasefire deal collapsed when Israel launched fresh strikes on Gaza. The Israeli military described the action as “pre-emptive strikes… based on Hamas’s readiness to execute terror attacks, build up force and re-arm”.

The previous ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas – which started on 19 January – was set up to have three stages, but did not make it past the first stage.

Stage two included establishing a permanent ceasefire, the return of remaining living hostages in Gaza in exchange for Palestinians imprisoned in Israel, and the complete withdrawal of Israeli forces from Gaza.

Luckin Coffee’s entry into the U.S. market poses a major threat to Starbucks as it opens two NYC locations

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In potentially the biggest threat to Starbucks since other companies figured out that they, too, could market pumpkin-spice flavored treats, Luckin Coffee, China’s biggest coffee chain, opened its first US stores yesterday with two outposts in New York City.

If you haven’t heard of Luckin, it’s probably because you’ve never tried to get a cup of joe in China, where it’s grown massive by offering super cheap drinks and quirky flavors.

  • The chain, which opened in 2017, surpassed the number of stores Starbucks had in China in 2019. It now has 22,000+ locations in its home country, per CNN.
  • In 2023, Luckin’s revenue in China exceeded what Starbucks made there for the first time, bouncing back from an accounting scandal that got Luckin booted from the Nasdaq in 2020.

Meanwhile…things haven’t looked so good for Starbucks in China recently, and not just because its baristas can’t spell names in Chinese characters, either. The chain positioned itself as the high-end option, and sales dipped as customers turned to cheaper alternatives like Luckin. Last week, Starbucks denied reports it planned to sell off its Chinese business.

Big picture: Starbucks has a 50-year headstart in the US market, but it’s recently been struggling here, too. The chain is trying to turn around five quarters of slowing sales by bringing back traditional coffeehouse vibes and smiley faces on cups.—AR

This report was originally published by Morning Brew.

Introducing the 2025 Fortune 500, the definitive ranking of the biggest companies in America. Explore this year’s list.

Tragic Blast at Indian Factory

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The Monday blast at a pharmaceutical factory set off a fire in the southern Indian state of Telangana, killing at least 36 people and injuring another three dozen, officials said.

Warner Music Group to cut annual costs by an additional $300 million, $170 million from staff reductions

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Warner Music Group CEO Robert Kyncl has announced what he calls the “remaining steps in our plan to help future-proof the company”.

This seemingly final stage in Warner’s recent restructuring under Kyncl is expected to further reduce the company’s annual costs by around USD $300 million on an annualized run-rate basis by the end of fiscal year 2027.

Just over half of that annual $300 million cost-cutting target ($170 million) will be achieved via headcount reductions at WMG, said the company.

A further $30 million of savings will be achieved by reducing costs (like admin and real estate expenses) directly related to the headcount reductions. The rest of the cost-cutting will target SG&A expenses.

In an SEC filing, Warner said it expects this plan to be “fully implemented by the end of calendar year 2026”.

The news comes on the same day (July 1) that Warner announced another significant element in the evolution of its company, launching a $1.2 billion joint venture fund with Bain Capital to buy music copyrights.

The first phase in Warner’s restructuring plan under Kyncl began last year, in a move “designed to free up more funds to invest in music”.

In February 2024, WMG announced it would cut around 10% of its global workforce, with approximately 600 roles to be eliminated.

Later in the year, it revised this plan, with 750 roles expected to go – the majority of which were based in Warner’s ‘Owned and Operated Media’ division.

That 2024 ‘phase one’ restructuring was expected to result in approximately $260 million in annual pre-tax cost savings.

The new “remaining steps” restructuring move, announced today, will supplement the plan announced by Kyncl last year.

When combined, the two sets of restructuring should therefore result in comfortably more than half a billion dollars in annual cost savings at the company.

In a note to staff sent today and obtained by MBW, Kyncl wrote: “Two years ago, we began to transform our company; not just to tinker around the edges of an old model, but to build a fast, innovative, and collaborative organization that reflects how music moves in the new world.

“Today, our strategy is gaining momentum. Our artists have held half of the Top Ten on the Spotify Global chart for the past ten weeks and nailed the No. 1 spot for all but four weeks of 2025.

“These aren’t just the biggest hits in the world today; they’re our evergreen catalog of the future. At the same time, we’re starting to see better progress in our global recorded music market share, while hitting new highs in music publishing. These wins are powered by our ability to become simultaneously more effective and more efficient… allowing us to invest in great talent, boost our star-making expertise, and deepen our world-building capabilities.”

“Our artists have held half of the Top Ten on the Spotify Global chart for the past ten weeks and nailed the No. 1 spot for all but four weeks of 2025. These aren’t just the biggest hits in the world today; they’re our evergreen catalog of the future.”

Robert Kyncl

Added Kyncl: “Building on this success requires us to keep evolving. Today we’re announcing the remaining steps in our plan to help future-proof the company and unlock the next era of growth. Specifically, we’ll be reducing our annual costs by ~$300 million as we reinvest in the business: ~$170 million through headcount rightsizing for agility and impact, and ~$130 million in administrative and real estate expenses. Many changes will be implemented in the next three months, with the remainder in fiscal 2026.”

He continued: “I know that this news is tough and unsettling, and you will have many questions… These decisions are not being made lightly, it will be difficult to say goodbye to talented people, and we’re committed to acting with empathy and integrity.”

Kyncl went on to discuss the “core drivers” of Warner’s growth plan in the year ahead.

On A&R, Kyncl wrote: “Working with the [Executive Leadership Team], we’ve sharpened our investment criteria… a more holistic and targeted approach to partnering with the world’s greatest musical talent, across (i) the most culturally potent and highest potential repertoire centers, (ii) globally managed off-roster catalog, and (iii) music publishing.”

On M&A, he added: “We have an ambitious M&A pipeline, especially for timeless catalogs. Our acquisitions of Tempo and start-up RSDL are good signposts of how we intend on growing both our copyrights and our capabilities. And, as you’ve seen today, we’ve announced an exciting venture with Bain Capital that adds up to $1.2 billion to our catalog purchasing power across both recorded music and music publishing.”

Kyncl suggested that a strengthened suite of services across Marketing, Distribution, Catalog, and Merchandising & Direct-to-Fan will back Warner’s “faster, more agile teams of local experts”.

He also referenced the recent rollout of the WMG Pulse app, while promising to “land the benefits of our financial transformation initiative as well as a vastly improved supply chain and data infrastructure”.

He concluded: “In an ever-changing industry, we must continue to supercharge our capabilities in long-term artist, songwriter, and catalog development. That’s why this company was created in the first place, it’s what we’ve always been best at, and it’s how we’ll differentiate ourselves in the future.

“As we implement these changes, we promise to communicate with you regularly. Thank you for your patience and support for one another. We’ve got some remarkable music coming, and I know that whatever challenges we’re navigating, your commitment to our artists and songwriters is unwavering.”Music Business Worldwide

Pieter Coetze takes charge of South African Worlds team without Chad Le Clos

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2025 WORLD AQUATICS CHAMPIONSHIPS

  • Saturday, July 26th – Sunday, August 3rd (pool swimming)
  • OCBC Aquatic Centre, Singapore
  • LCM (50m)
  • Meet Central

With the 2025 World Aquatics Championships on the horizon, we now know who will represent the nation of South Africa in Singapore later this month.

University of Virginia Cavalier Aimee Canny leads the women’s roster, joined by Kaylene Corbett and national record holders Erin Gallagher and Rebecca Meder.

21-year-old World Championships bronze medalist Pieter Coetze is poised to lead the men’s roster, one that is void of Olympic champion Chad le Clos.

As we reported, 33-year-old le Clos is bypassing this year’s World Championships, choosing instead to focus on rehabilitation of a back injury. In February, the Olympic icon anticipated this year’s World Aquatics World Swimming Cup in October as his comeback to competitive racing.

Along with Coetze, former University of Georgia NCAA champion Matt Sates will be in the mix on the men’s side, along with breaststroking ace Michael Houlie.

At the 2023 World Championships in Fukuoka, South Africa finished 11th in the overall swimming medal table, taking home 2 medals. Now-retired Tatjana Smith (nee Schoenmaker) won the women’s 200m breast and earned 100m breast silver.

In Doha, at the much less-attended 2024 World Championships, Coetze came away with South Africa’s sole medal, reaping bronze in the men’s 200m backstroke.

 

Revolutionary Development: New Sustainable Material Transforms Houses into Batteries

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Two sections on this site focus on construction and renewable energy. However, it’s rare for the two to converge in a single technological breakthrough. The innovative sustainable concrete proposed at MIT is heading in that direction. This new material can store energy, allowing us to imagine buildings as giant batteries that store renewable energy from solar panels on roofs and facades or even windows with photovoltaic glass. In other words, the potential for energy self-sufficient homes. In this article, we discuss this technology and its applications.

Towards sustainable concrete

Since Roman times, concrete has been the bedrock of our civilization. It’s said to be the second most consumed material on the planet after water. However, it requires cement as a basic element. Cement, in turn, is mainly composed of clinker, produced through a thermal process of calcining limestone and clay, which emits carbon dioxide.

For this reason, alternatives are being explored to limit clinker use and thus reduce carbon emissions during concrete production. But this isn’t the only way to achieve sustainable concrete.

Another alternative is functional concretes—materials with properties that indirectly enhance their sustainability and reduce their environmental impact. For instance, self-repairing concrete with greater durability would be more sustainable. So would concrete capable of absorbing atmospheric CO2. The case in point is another functional concrete, theoretically turning buildings and infrastructure into renewable energy storage facilities, contributing to the decarbonization of the economy.

This approach has been explored in recent years with projects like NewSOL, an ACCIONA initiative that used concrete blocks as batteries for solar thermal plants.

MIT’s concrete-battery

So, what does this new sustainable concrete consist of? It’s a material capable of storing energy for short periods. The MIT engineering team used common materials such as cement, water, and carbon black to achieve this.

Carbon black, traditionally used in ink manufacturing, is integrated into the cement to form fractal-like branched structures that exponentially increase the internal conductive surface area, enabling rapid charging and discharging of energy.

The result is a concrete “supercapacitor” that can transform structural elements of houses, like walls or foundations, into battery-like components capable of storing renewable energy. This technology can store up to ten kilowatt-hours for every forty-five cubic meters of material, enough for the daily consumption of an average home or to contribute to the stability of the electricity grid.

Cement supercapacitors can charge and discharge much faster than conventional batteries, providing immediate energy availability when needed. Thus, while not a replacement for existing batteries, it represents a significant step forward in the transition to renewable energy sources like solar and wind, which produce energy intermittently.

If industrialized, we could see houses and buildings in remote areas becoming completely autonomous thanks to solar panels connected to these concrete supercapacitors. We might also envision roads capable of wirelessly recharging electric vehicles while on the move.

However, like any supercapacitor, MIT’s technology doesn’t guarantee a stable electricity supply but offers the potential to cover specific periods when a household runs out of power.

Other examples of sustainable concrete

As noted earlier, some functional concretes are paving the way for more sustainable alternatives with less environmental impact. An example is the self-repairing material recently presented by MIT. Researchers at the U.S. technological institute have created a material that, like plants, uses carbon dioxide from the air to grow and self-repair.

This synthetic polymer, composed of plant-derived chloroplasts and aminopropyl methacrylamide, reacts with light and CO2, allowing the material to strengthen and repair cracks without human intervention. By combining biological and synthetic components, a gel is created that solidifies and repairs cracks when exposed to light and air.

The new sustainable concrete not only promises to extend the life cycle of buildings and reduce natural resource consumption but also significantly reduces carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by utilizing CO2 in its growth process. The researchers’ goal is to use synthetic chloroplasts to extend the material’s life and enable large-scale production.

If you want to learn about other materials like MIT’s sustainable concrete, subscribe to our newsletter at the bottom of this page. You’ll receive content on construction, renewable energies, 3D printing, artificial intelligence, and robotics, among other topics.

 

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