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Sep 4, 2024 |
publicaccountant.com.au | Emmanuel Josserand |Martijn Boersma
This entails the right to refuse to read or respond to work-related calls, texts and emails outside their working hours, unless that refusal is unreasonable.
The Fair Work Commission says what will matter is whether the refusal is unreasonable, rather than whether the attempted contact is unreasonable.
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Aug 31, 2024 |
techxplore.com | Emmanuel Josserand |Martijn Boersma
From Monday August 26, many employees in Australia get a new right, called the right to disconnect from work. This entails the right to refuse to read or respond to work-related calls, texts and emails outside their working hours, unless that refusal is unreasonable. The Fair Work Commission says what will matter is whether the refusal is unreasonable, rather than whether the attempted contact is unreasonable.
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Aug 31, 2024 |
msn.com | Emmanuel Josserand |Martijn Boersma
Continue reading More for You Continue reading More for You
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Aug 27, 2024 |
dailybulletin.com.au | Emmanuel Josserand
From today, Monday August 26, many employees in Australia get a new right, called the right to disconnect from work. This entails the right to refuse to read or respond to work-related calls, texts and emails outside their working hours, unless that refusal is unreasonable. The Fair Work Commission says what will matter is whether the refusal is unreasonable, rather than whether the attempted contact is unreasonable.
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Aug 26, 2024 |
startupdaily.net | Timothy Koskie |Simon Thomsen |Alan Manly |Emmanuel Josserand
When Pavel Durov arrived in France on his private jet last Saturday, he was greeted by police who promptly arrested him. As the founder of the direct messaging platform Telegram, he was accused of facilitating the widespread crimes committed on it. The following day, a French judge extended Durov’s initial period of detention, allowing police to detain him for up to 96 hours. Telegram has rejected the allegations against Durov.
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Aug 26, 2024 |
startupdaily.net | Simon Thomsen |Alan Manly |Emmanuel Josserand |Martijn Boersma
Bunnings CEO Michael Schneider, former Tech Council CEO Kate Pounder and ex-NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet turned BHP advisor are among a new board members of a new political think tank led by Square Peg’s Paul Bassat. Amplify is a non-partisan organisation, independent of political parties, and says it’s seeking to find the “uncommon ground” on issues Australians care about most.
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Aug 26, 2024 |
rte.ie | Emmanuel Josserand |Martijn Boersma
Analysis: While it can improve work-life balance and wellbeing, its success depends on implementation and enforcement within each workplace By Emmanuel Josserand, University of Technology Sydney and Martijn Boersma, University of Sydney From today, many employees in Australia get a new right, called the right to disconnect from work. This entails the right to refuse to read or respond to work-related calls, texts and emails outside their working hours, unless that refusal is unreasonable.
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Aug 26, 2024 |
startupdaily.net | Alan Manly |Simon Thomsen |Emmanuel Josserand |Martijn Boersma
Applications for Bupa’s 2024 eco-Disruptive program, which is open to start-ups in Australia, New Zealand and Hong Kong, close next Monday, September 2. The program gives selected startups with £25,000 (A$49,000) in initial funding and then £200,000 (A$390,000) if they win Bupa’s global eco-Disruptive competition.
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Aug 26, 2024 |
startupdaily.net | Alan Manly |Simon Thomsen |Emmanuel Josserand |Martijn Boersma
The moment an entrepreneur decides to take the plunge and launch a unique value proposition, it often feels like a solitary journey. This decision is personal, driven by a deep desire to seize a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Analysing this moment reveals a singular experience—one person, one opportunity, one launch. It’s a scenario that can easily be seen as lonely, even though it might also represent self-actualisation, the pinnacle of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.
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Aug 25, 2024 |
startupdaily.net | Simon Thomsen |Emmanuel Josserand |Martijn Boersma |Harrison Polites
Data analysis startup WhyHive has raised $600,000 in a pre-Seed round. The company’s first raise comes after six years of bootstrapping and was led by Skalata Ventures, with support from Culture Amp’s Jon Williams, Linktree’s Alex Zaccaria and Up Bank’s Dom Pym. The Melbourne startup describes itself as “like Canva, but for data: easy to use and accessible”.