
Man Convicted Under Nazi Ban, Qantas Fined for Selling Cancelled Tickets, Global Leaders Gather in Sydney, Australia Expands Public NBN, and more...
Australia Daily News · brief.news
October 8, 202410m 17s
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Show Notes
(0:10): Man First to Be Convicted Under Victoria's New Nazi Salute Ban, Faces 12 Months in Prison
(1:58): Qantas Fined $120M for Selling Tickets on 8,000 Cancelled Flights, Promises Reforms
(3:55): Global Leaders Unite in Sydney for Groundbreaking Summit on Biodiversity and Climate Action
(5:57): Australia to Keep NBN Public, Boost Speeds and Expand Fiber with New Legislation
(8:00): Qantas Apologizes for Screening R-Rated Film 'Daddio' on Sydney to Tokyo Flight
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Image credit: The West Australian
(1:58): Qantas Fined $120M for Selling Tickets on 8,000 Cancelled Flights, Promises Reforms
(3:55): Global Leaders Unite in Sydney for Groundbreaking Summit on Biodiversity and Climate Action
(5:57): Australia to Keep NBN Public, Boost Speeds and Expand Fiber with New Legislation
(8:00): Qantas Apologizes for Screening R-Rated Film 'Daddio' on Sydney to Tokyo Flight
To subscribe visit https://www.brief.news.
For more updates in your inbox each morning visit www.brief.news.
Image credit: The West Australian
Topics
Nazi salute AustraliaJacob Hersant convictionVictoria hate speech lawantisemitism in AustraliaQantas Airlines financial penaltyACCC lawsuit against Qantasflight cancellation compensationbiodiversity loss solutionsGlobal Nature Positive SummitAustralian Government NBN legislationpublic ownership of NBNQantas R-rated movie incidentDaddio film controversyfamily-friendly in-flight entertainmentclimate change and biodiversityeconomic impact of biodiversitydigital inclusion in AustraliaQantas ticket sales misconductcourt ruling on hate speechpublic resources privatization debateIndigenous representation in environmental discussions