Bunnings has been found to have invaded the privacy of what is estimated to be hundreds of thousands of customers through the ...
Wesfarmers-owned Bunnings, the country's biggest home improvement chain, breached the privacy of thousands of customers by using facial recognition technology without gaining consent, an Australian ...
Bunnings’ managing director Mike Schneider said the company believed its use of facial recognition “balanced our privacy obligations and the need to protect our team, customers, and suppliers against ...
Watchdog reviews privacy policies of 10 travel platforms, finds three have yet to add data retention sections after being ...
Retail giant Bunnings has breached privacy laws by using facial recognition technology on its customers, according to a ...
A bill containing the first significant round of government reforms to the Privacy Act 1988 just took a big step towards final implementation. Last week, a Senate Committee tabled a report supporting ...
The Information Commissioner's Office on keeping up with artificial intelligence and holding big tech to account for privacy rights breaches.
Bunnings Group has been rapped by Australia’s privacy watchdog for using facial recognition technology at 62 stores over three years. The Office of the Australian Information Commissioner (OAIC) found ...
Bunnings says the technology’s use appropriately balanced privacy with the need to protect staff against violent and organised crime.
The United States first ushered into the era of de-criminalizing abortions in Roe v. Wade (1973) by declaring a regulation ...
Today marks the first use of body cameras by a police officer in Newfoundland and Labrador. Frontline Mounties in the ...
Hundreds of thousands of Australians had their privacy breached when Bunnings used facial recognition technology across ...