Law
New laws on the right to disconnect have come into effect at a time when workplace culture and junior employees' expectations at law firms are evolving.
Labor’s misinformation bill faces defeat in the Senate, with crossbenchers opposing it over concerns about exemptions, regulatory flaws and vague definitions.
With the influence of US firms in Australia on the rise, White & Case partners Brendan Quinn and Tim Sackar discuss US capital’s impact and their Asia-Pacific focused strategy.
US men's mag Maxim claims 'out of control' Australian publisher breached policy by soliciting models
The title's local publisher has been accused of attempting to "attract models to pay" to participate in photo shoots, and of overstating its readership.
The cryptocurrency is booming again, but don't expect any support from Australia's top financial officials. "I don't understand it," says RBA governor Michele Bullock.
The growing use of AI and other technology could disrupt some of the Australian legal industry's longest-held traditions.
WiseTech Global is back in the news after shareholders launched a class action against the logistics software company.
Amazon’s David Zapolsky had a clear message for the Prime Minister and other policymakers on a recent visit from the US: when it comes to regulating Big Tech — tread carefully.
The Albanese government has a doctrine on regulating the online world: set the rules, and fine social media giants for not complying. That approach is facing backlash.
The world's richest person is in a long-running spat with Australia, and the US presidential election result has just handed him more power.
A year after unfair contract terms were made illegal, large law firms say they're still frustrated by a lack of clarity over how the rules should be applied.
Australia’s privacy chief says AI privacy laws are “clear cut". Lawyers speaking with Capital Brief say businesses are still confused.
Greenwashing allegations against Santos could pave the way for increased litigation over corporate net-zero plans if the energy giant loses its ongoing Federal Court case.
The information watchdog is investigating claims Defence falsely stated that internal correspondence related to a war crimes allegation did not exist.