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On this week's episode of the Unnatural Selection Podcast, we discuss: Kelly Bayer Rosmarin resigns as Optus CEO. Barbra Streisand Explains: Why I Cloned My Dog. Javier Milei: Argentina's far-right outsider wins presidential election. Javier Milei wants to gut spending and ditch the peso, but will it save Argentina's economy? Dan Andrews Is Locked In A Battle With Melbourne Golf Clubs Still Bitter About Lockdowns OpenAI Staff Threaten to Quit Unless Board Resigns. New OpenAI CEO Was a Character in a Harry Potter Fanfic That's Wildly Popular With Effective Altruists. Helen Toner, the effective altruist who sparked the Open AI coup. Sam Altman to return as CEO of OpenAI. Jan. 6 rioter dubbed "QAnon Shaman" plans to run for U.S. Congress. Squid Game: The Challenge contestants threaten legal action against Netflix and producers. Truck stowaway 'lucky to be alive' after hiding beneath B-double for 390km trip to Gold Coast. The Unnatural Selection podcast is produced by Jorge Tsipos, Adam Direen and Tom Heath. Visit the Unnatural Selection website at www.UnnaturalShow.com for stuff and things. The views expressed are those of the hosts and their guests and do not reflect those of any other entities. Unnatural Selection is a show made for comedic purposes and should not be taken seriously by anyone. Twitter: @JorgeTsipos @TomDHeath @UnnaturalShow Instagram: @JorgeTsipos @Tom.Heath @UnnaturalShow
Optus pissed off customers by not delivering a serviced that is required. Kelly Bayer Rosmarin has not compensated customers instead gave free data. Where is Optus heading in the future. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/stephen-shiels/message
Inside cricket's long road to glory - and why moribund Australian rugby just keeps getting it wrong. Find out more about The Front podcast here. You can read about this story and more on The Australian's website or on The Australian's app. This episode of The Front is presented by Kristen Amiet, and edited by Jasper Leak. The multimedia editor is Lia Tsamoglou, and original music is composed by Jasper Leak.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The boss of Australian telecommunications company Optus has resigned after a nationwide outage affected millions. CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin quit after a senate grilling last week. She'll be replaced by the Chief Financial Officer. A major cyber attack last year - also under her tenure - compromised personal documents of two million customers. Australia correspondent Oliver Peterson says her handling of the outage was criticised. "She was very reluctant to get onto the front foot, didn't say much- finally came in kicking and screaming to actually reveal what had happened." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Does stepping down have a gender component to it? Who would know. But you could argue, especially in this day and age, that the resignation of Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, the CEO of Optus, is a very clear sign of the buck stopping at the top. Female leaders are leading the way when it comes to responsibility for their actions, and it comes at the same time we didn't get a resignation from a man. It took a rolling of Hamish McLennan from Australian rugby. Both made horrific errors, both were in charge of catastrophic cock-ups, and both had most of Australia calling for their heads. But only one did the right thing. It's often the case. We are very quick to criticise those at the top. It looks easy being the boss of stuff, you get big money, big power and, most of the time, nothing catastrophic happens. Your success or otherwise is dealt with behind closed doors, by boards who hold you accountable for KPI's and goals and various other bits and pieces that the wider world never really sees, nor cares much about. But in these two exceedingly high-profile cases what is, or should never be forgotten, is the cold, hard truth that you are only one mistake away from calamity. Sport is important to countries like Australia and New Zealand and being able to use your phone and internet is kind of up there as well. No one would have been able to name the head of Optus, the same way most of us don't know who heads Spark, or the chair of the NZ Rugby board. But in Australia you become a household name overnight when you're in charge of the mess. McLennan looked like a prat. He made a captain's call on Eddie Jones, not unlike NZ made a call on Scott Robertson over Ian Foster. That is yet to play out fully. For Eddie, we all know what happened, but someone left behind had to pay for that. McLennan, despite it being his call, didn't want to go so he got rolled, and rightly so, and looks like the miserable sod he is. To Rosmarin's credit she owned it, fronted the Senate committee last week and quit yesterday. She didn't pull the plug or mess up the software, but she ran the company that looked for about 10 hours a week or so back, like a third-world shambles. At the time she didn't front and when she did, she was shocking, the Government bailed her out and the public wanted her gone. She did the right thing The lesson is leadership comes in all shapes and sizes and all forms. You lead on good days and bad. Knowing when to quit and how to act honourably is a skill. Both are gone. But only one did it the right way. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The boss of Australian telecommunications company Optus has resigned after a nationwide outage affected millions. CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin quit after a senate grilling last week. She'll be replaced by the Chief Financial Officer. A major cyber attack last year - also under her tenure - compromised personal documents of two million customers. Australia correspondent Oliver Peterson says her handling of the outage was criticised. "She was very reluctant to get onto the front foot, didn't say much- finally came in kicking and screaming to actually reveal what had happened." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Inside cricket's long road to glory - and why moribund Australian rugby just keeps getting it wrong. Find out more about The Front podcast here. You can read about this story and more on The Australian's website or on The Australian's app. This episode of The Front is presented by Claire Harvey, produced by Kristen Amiet, and edited by Jasper Leak. The multimedia editor is Lia Tsamoglou, and original music is composed by Jasper Leak.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Tuesday 21 November 2023 Prime Minister Anthony Albanese defends his dealings with China over an incident last week where an Australian diver was injured by a Chinese vessel. Also today Optus boss Kelly Bayer Rosmarin resigns. Bunnings to push into cleaning products And the World Cup cricket final, which Australia won, drew 57 million viewers in India alone Australian companies covered: AKE, ALL, ASX.AX, BHP, BUN1, BXB, CBA, CRN, JHX, KAR, NAB, NEM, ORG, PDN, REA, SGR, SGT, STO, TCS, WDSFind out more: https://fearandgreed.com.auSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
CEO of Optus, Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, has resigned to spend more time with her burner phones. In the meantime, Charles and Dom talk about how India lost the cricket world cup due to out-woking Australia - as will soon be reported by SkyNews. You can lose the ads and get more content! Become a Chaser Report VIP member at http://apple.co/thechaser OR https://plus.acast.com/s/the-chaser-report. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Kelly Bayer Rosmarin resigned as the CEO of Optus, so who can we expect to replace her?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Frankreichs Präsident Macron fordert sofortige Feuerpause, die zu einem Waffenstillstand führen soll/ Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, Chefin von Optus, wirft das Handtuch/ Rosalynn Carter, Ehefrau des früheren Präsidenten Jimmy Carter, verstirbt mit 96 Jahren/ Huthi-Rebellen kapern ein Frachtschiff vor der Küste des Jemen
AMP Chief Economist Shane Oliver forecasts what's next for the future of Optus. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin has resigned, the search continues for the wreckage of a small jet in Victoria, former First Lady Rosalyn Carter, wife of former president Jimmy Carter, has died, Argentina has elected a new Trump-like President, Suki Waterhouse and Robert Pattinson are expecting their first child together and Aussies have declared which Bluey episodes are their absolute favourites.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
SBS தமிழ் ஒலிபரப்பின் இன்றைய (திங்கட்கிழமை 20/11/2023) செய்திகள். வாசித்தவர் றேனுகா
MONEY FM 89.3 - Prime Time with Howie Lim, Bernard Lim & Finance Presenter JP Ong
Singapore stocks started the week on a softer note today, led by declines from banks and other index counters. In early trade, the Straits Times Index headed down 0.4 per cent to 3,112.44 points, after 29.7 million securities changed hands in the broader market. In terms of companies to watch for today, we have Singtel, after its Australian unit Optus' chief executive, Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, has resigned after the company experienced a network-wide outage on Nov 8. Elsewhere from sentiment ahead of the latest Fed minutes to OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman ousted by its board, more international developments remain in focus. On Market View, The Evening Runway's finance presenter Chua Tian Tian unpacked the developments with David Kuo, Co-founder, The Smart Investor.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this week's episode of the Unnatural Selection Podcast, we discuss: Detainees released without visas after High Court decision in immigration revelation. Optus identifies cause of nationwide outage, says 'changes to routing information' after software upgrade to blame. Optus says 228 triple-0 calls were unable to be made during the outage. Optus boss Kelly Bayer Rosmarin has faced a Senate grilling over customers being unable to call triple zero during their 12-hour network outage, with Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young asking the CEO to "cough up" and "accept responsibility". David Cameron makes shock return to British politics as Home Secretary Suella Braverman sacked by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. Sam Altman fired as CEO of OpenAI. OpenAI board in discussions with Sam Altman to return as CEO. Meta allows Facebook and Instagram ads saying 2020 election was rigged. The Unnatural Selection podcast is produced by Jorge Tsipos, Adam Direen and Tom Heath. Visit the Unnatural Selection website at www.UnnaturalShow.com for stuff and things. The views expressed are those of the hosts and their guests and do not reflect those of any other entities. Unnatural Selection is a show made for comedic purposes and should not be taken seriously by anyone. Twitter: @JorgeTsipos @TomDHeath @UnnaturalShow Instagram: @JorgeTsipos @Tom.Heath @UnnaturalShow
Ray Hadley has his say after Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin announced her resignation on Monday following the telco's major outage earlier this month. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin resignsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Optus CEO, Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, has side-stepped questions about her own future, as she fronts a Senate inquiry into last week's outage that left 10 million customers offline.From Ukraine to the outback: the Australian Army test-fires new deadly missile technology in the Woomera Prohibited Area;A warning of more legal challenges, as the Government's detainee bill is signed into law;And the problems when cash is king: we head to the West Australian town that the big banks have left behind.
The Optus CEO, Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, has side-stepped questions about her own future, as she fronts a Senate inquiry into last week's outage that left 10 million customers offline.From Ukraine to the outback: the Australian Army test-fires new deadly missile technology in the Woomera Prohibited Area;A warning of more legal challenges, as the Government's detainee bill is signed into law;And the problems when cash is king: we head to the West Australian town that the big banks have left behind.
The Optus CEO, Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, has side-stepped questions about her own future, as she fronts a Senate inquiry into last week's outage that left 10 million customers offline.From Ukraine to the outback: the Australian Army test-fires new deadly missile technology in the Woomera Prohibited Area;A warning of more legal challenges, as the Government's detainee bill is signed into law;And the problems when cash is king: we head to the West Australian town that the big banks have left behind.
La directora ejecutiva de Optus, Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, se enfrenta a una investigación del Senado sobre la falla de la red el miércoles pasado. Escucha esta y otras noticias importantes del día.
As I'm talking right now… Optus boss Kelly Bayer Rosmarin is defending her leadership before a Senate inquiry where she is being grilled for two hours on why her telco suffered a 12-hour communications blackout last week.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Optus chief executive Kelly Bayer Rosmarin admits she still doesn't have a clear idea of what triggered yesterday's outage, or whether the Optus reputation can be recovered.
We all expect network failures sometimes, patchy internet and drop outs in phone calls, but Optus has taken it to a whole new level. Not only were 10 million customers left without service for half a day, but for hours the telecommunications giant said it had absolutely no idea what was wrong. Today, technology expert from the University of Melbourne Suelette Dreyfus on how an outage like this can leave us all vulnerable. Featured: Dr Suelette Dreyfus, University of Melbourne School of Computing and Information Systems
Penrith players have revealed the Top Gun inspiration which helped drive them to premiership success. Optus chief executive Kelly Bayer Rosmarin denies there is a rift between the company and the federal government and says the telco is co-operating fully with all investigations into a massive data breach. Household water bills will shoot up by $130 per year if Warragamba Dam's maximum capacity is lowered/ Staggering $47.8 billion has been clawed back by the Australian Taxation Office in the past five years from tax cheats as well as people making mistakes on their tax returns, it can be revealed.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
“We're deeply sorry.” Those are the stark words which you will see if you click onto the website of Optus this morning – one of the biggest brands in Australia facing one of the biggest corporate blunders in history. The online pilfering of the personal details of millions of past and present customers is the equivalent of a work experience kid at KFC posting the secret 11 herbs and spices on Facebook – a letting go of your business' state secrets because of slack practice. With your brand crumbling, and millions of customers grumbling, you would think the Optus boss might have been hard at work over the weekend trying to fix what has been a calamitous mess. Instead, chief executive Kelly Bayer Rosmarin found time for a quick trip to her $4 million holiday home on the weekend – spotted out and about with her husband, her greyhound – and a security guard.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
THE office of Victorian Governor Linda Dessau has detailed the moments leading up to her flight to Canberra. In a statement on Friday, the office explained that Wednesday morning's Qantas flight from Melbourne to Canberra was delayed after the senior official was sent to the wrong departure gate. OPTUS customers are being urged to ‘be vigilant' and keep a close eye on their online accounts, according to CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, who has fronted the media a day after revealing a massive cyber attack affecting up to nine million customers nationally. SWINBURNE University students are being awarded points towards their degrees for working on the campaign for the Teal candidate in Hawthorn at November's state election. THE AFL has appointed former Western Bulldogs president and experienced class action lawyer Peter Gordon as its own counsel ahead of the investigation into allegations of Hawthorn's mistreatment of First Nations players. For updates and breaking news throughout the day, take out a subscription at heraldsun.com.au. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Optus chief executive Kelly Bayer Rosmarin was almost in tears as she addressed the telco's response to a huge data breach. It's been confirmed Optus isn't being specific about how it's contacting customers. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The telecommunications sector is deceptively straightforward: there are just three players in Australia with their own infrastructure. But the industry is changing quickly, as technology and customer expectations evolve.Kelly Bayer Rosmarin, CEO of Optus, talks to Sean Aylmer about Telstra, TPG, the NBN, and how Optus aims to change the market.Support the show: https://fearandgreed.com.au/all-episodesSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Kelly Bayer Rosmarin was appointed CEO of Optus and Consumer Australia on 1 April 2020. Prior to joining Optus, Kelly spent 14 years with Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) where she held several senior positions. Alec and Bryce talk to her about Optus' future, how Covid and its restrictions have impacted the business, the competitive challenges of the telecommunications industry and her thoughts on leadership and workplace culture. Order the book on Booktopia or Amazon now. If you want to let Alec or Bryce know what you think of an episode, contact them here. Make sure you don't miss anything about Equity Mates - sign up to our email list here. And visit this page if you love everything Equity Mates and want to support our work.Have you just started investing? Listen to Get Started Investing – Equity Mates series that breaks down all the fundamentals you need to feel confident to start your journey.Want more Equity Mates? Come to our website and subscribe to Equity Mates Investing Podcast, social media channels, Thought Starters mailing list and more at or check out our Youtube channel.*****In the spirit of reconciliation, Equity Mates Media and the hosts of Equity Mates Investing Podcast acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respects to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people today. *****Equity Mates Investing Podcast is a product of Equity Mates Media. All information in this podcast is for education and entertainment purposes only. Equity Mates gives listeners access to information and educational content provided by a range of financial services professionals. It is not intended as a substitute for professional finance, legal or tax advice. The hosts of Equity Mates Investing Podcast are not financial professionals and are not aware of your personal financial circumstances. Equity Mates Media does not operate under an Australian financial services licence and relies on the exemption available under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) in respect of any information or advice given.Before making any financial decisions you should read the Product Disclosure Statement and, if necessary, consult a licensed financial professional. Do not take financial advice from a podcast or video. For more information head to the disclaimer page on the Equity Mates website where you can find ASIC resources and find a registered financial professional near you. Equity Mates is part of the Acast Creator Network. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.