Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

.

  • Written by Misha Ketchell, Managing Editor, The Conversation

On Friday we removed an article called “A Chinese company gave $3.6 million to Labor while bidding for government work – and it’s totally legal” after becoming aware of a significant factual error that undermined some of the article’s key arguments.

The article claimed Chinese company Shanghai Zhongfu Group gave more than A$3.6 million to the Australian Labor Party in the same year it won the right to develop a controversial food bowl project. The money was not a donation, rather it was paid to the Victorian ALP to purchase an office building in King St, Melbourne.

We are committed to providing accurate and reliable information, and to acknowledging errors in an open and transparent way when they occur.

We apologise for the mistake.

Authors: Misha Ketchell, Managing Editor, The Conversation

Read more http://theconversation.com/retraction-why-we-removed-an-article-about-chinese-donations-65165

Business News

The ultimate checklist for launching a digital-first business

If you’re launching a business in 2025, chances are it’s going to be digital-first. Whether you’re running an online store, offering consulting services, or building something entirely new, they all h...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

“SMBs Are Building the Future While Australia Sleeps” — Marc Degli on AI, Innovation, and What Needs to Change

Australia’s startup scene has been called “emerging” for a decade — but for many founders, it still feels stalled. Government funding is mired in bureaucracy. Investors hedge their bets on “safe” deal...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

Hydrogen Pipe Infrastructure: A Guide to Future Networks

As Australia moves towards a cleaner energy future, hydrogen is emerging as a key player. But how do we get this promising energy source from production facilities to where it's needed? The answer l...

Daily Bulletin - avatar Daily Bulletin

LayBy Deals