People should know that Australia was started as a
"chartered corporation" as mentioned by ex PM Tony Abbott.
Any action by a 'person' on this colony is an action in
business, trade or commerce.
The general population of Australia are used as slaves to fulfill the corporate actions of people in government.
The obedient slaves of Australia have now learned that the
incompetent imbeciles in government cannot keep hold data on government servers
and have put forward some falsified documentation that builds a case for cloud
storage (at great expense to the tax slaves).
Despite whatever BS assurances you get from the imbeciles in
government or their brethren (with whom they've struck up the deals), cloud
storage is not secure meaning it is hackable.
At least when the data was held at a government department site you could point the finger at someone when something went wrong, now just point it to the clouds.
The best part about it is that the people involved in
storing your data may never tell you the truth, what data was stolen or when, as there
are no laws / treaties that mandate this, or even a 'remedy' to the victims if such a law was put in place.
What the Australian mainstream media does not mention is that the US government agencies will have access to every bit of information on Australians, officially.
With every new action the government takes, it puts the good
people at greater risk.
They sure must hate their tax paying slaves.
You can read the article from 15 Aug 2017 by news.com.au of
the headline;
Microsoft to build
hyperscale cloud regions for Australian government, to unlock power of AI
MICROSOFT has struck a deal that should dramatically
modernise how the government handles our information.
Microsoft and the Australian government are partnering to
create the first hyperscale government cloud designed to handle unclassified
and protected government data.
MICROSOFT has struck a deal with the Australian government to build cloud
infrastructure designed to dramatically modernise how the government handles
our data, and the services it provides.
Microsoft, in partnership with Canberra Data Centres, and the Australian
government announced the initiative on Tuesday describing it as the first
hyperscale government cloud designed to handle unclassified and protected
government data.
The basic idea behind the project — which has been about three years in the
making — is to modernise the system that underpins services such as healthcare,
immigration, border protection, welfare and tax to pave the way for things like
individual digital identities and connected health records.
Due to come into operation in the first half of 2018, Microsoft will
effectively build two new cloud regions over the top of government data, which
is being securely stored in Canberra.
“We’re building cloud platforms close to where the data is. By building our
cloud infrastructure in the data centre where most government data already
lives we can really unlock some of that data and innovate on top of it,” the
lead engineer for Microsoft Azure in Australia, James Kavanagh, told
news.com.au.
Described as “nation building infrastructure” the initiative will allow
government agencies to unlock the potential of innovative technologies such as
machine learning, artificial intelligent bots and blockchain.
It could even usher in a new and more efficient tax system, Mr Kavanagh
said.
At a basic level, the partnership will mean that the government can join
together services for Australians, helping to connect healthcare records,
education records and other data to make it easier to access government
services.
“The Australian Government has embarked on a sweeping program of change,
bringing digital innovation to the transformation of the Australian public sector,”
said Assistant Minister for Cities and Digital Transformation Angus Taylor.
Mr Kavanagh believes being able to unleash artificial intelligence on public
data could be a real gamechanger.
“I think what’s going to be key is artificial intelligence and applying
things like bots and machine learning and language translation — bringing all
these capabilities that frankly right now aren’t really accessible to
government because of their security and privacy requirements.”
James Kavanagh from Microsoft Azure
and Greg Boorer from the Canberra Data Centre.Source:Supplied
“Making that available you can imagine some scenarios where blockchain could
be used for protecting our healthcare records, you could see artificial
intelligence being applied to human services,” he said.
“When you ask government for advice actually getting tailored advice to what
you want rather than generic advice to everybody. It’s just incredible the
possibilities it could open up.”
Today’s news follows a June announcement in which the Australian Signals
Directorate (ASD) formally certified an expanded range of Microsoft Azure and
Microsoft Office 365 services for inclusion on its Certified Cloud Services
List.
The two CDC campuses are also the only private data centre facilities in
Australia with the security controls and accreditations appropriate for the
handling of top secret government data.
“We have some of the strongest privacy and data laws in the world,” said
Greg Boorer the CEO and founder of Canberra Data Centres.
While the CDC handles secret government data, such data is “isolated and
protected in a different way to the data that will enter this platform,” he
said.
As the largest provider of data capacity to the Australian government, Mr
Boorer said the new partnership is “all around unlocking the potential of that
data to the benefit of the Australian citizen”.
Bill Gates 1999 predictions1:27
In 1999 Bill Gates made some bold predictions about the future, which
sounded crazy at the time, but in 2017 how far off the mark was the Microsoft
founder?