Digital Literacy stories
Survivors of domestic abuse could get safer access to communication as donated handsets are refurbished and recycled across Australia.
Australian and New Zealand students borrowed 4.8 million digital books in 2025 as ebooks led and audiobooks gained popularity across schools.
Australian Digital Health Agency says 1800MEDICARE app downloads top 1 million as broader My Health Record access and alerts are set to expand.
Survey data showing 35% of small firms hit by cyberattacks has prompted a free Optus scheme to help businesses prepare and respond.
For millions of households, the software can now trim bills, shift battery use around tariffs and spot faults before they cause outages.
More than 642,000 young people in eight countries will gain AI and financial literacy lessons as the partnership enters its second year.
Families get short cyber safety lessons at home as deepfakes, grooming and scams put children and adults at growing risk online.
Schools in the US and UK now have a new way to measure pupils' AI readiness as JetLearn pushes to shape an emerging education standard.
Users risk mistaking agreeable chatbot replies for understanding, as Smudge says commercial AI rewards flattery over accuracy.
Australian employers face privacy, dismissal and confidentiality exposure as staff use AI without training or clear rules, lawyers warn.
Concerns over misinformation and manipulation are creating an opening for eYou, which is now available worldwide on iOS and Android.
Canadian employers are increasingly demanding AI skills, with Google's new course aimed at helping workers meet that expectation in under 10 hours.
Familiarity with AI fakery is not improving detection, as a UK survey found Britons struggled to spot manipulated video and stills.
Local groups in host areas can now seek grants of up to GBP £5,000 for projects after Cellnex UK earmarked GBP £180,000 in year one.
Free guidance for students and lecturers now stresses critical thinking, ethics and creativity as universities grapple with generative AI.
Student focus and peer discussion improved in a screen-free pilot, prompting curriculum changes in language and writing studies courses.
Mobile users are most at risk as quishing has surged in New Zealand, with scammers exploiting delivery and parking prompts.
Worries over cyberattacks, bias and weak data systems are driving calls for AI rules that protect trust, jobs and security.
A cultural gap is slowing workplace AI adoption, with 42% of U.S. workers too embarrassed to ask colleagues for help, a survey finds.
Despite widespread trust and security fears, 15% of Singapore consumers have used autonomous AI in the past six months, EY found.