Julie Power
Julie Power is a senior reporter at The Sydney Morning Herald.
Opinion
Got a cough coming on? Don't soldier on. For heaven's sake, march homewards
Based on the cavalier public behaviour I've witnessed recently, I fear we've forgotten the hard-won lessons of COVID.
Today, 4.30PM
Julie Power
Latest
Architecture
Saved from the wrecking ball, AMP building reopens as a glittering star on Circular Quay
Sydney's first real skyscraper has been given a new lease of life after a three-year restoration and modernisation.
June 6, 2025
Julie Power
Heritage
'Not like there's a Mitre 10 down the road': The mission to rebuild Kosciuszko's famous huts
Hiker Hadi Nazari survived nearly two weeks in the mountains, helped by two muesli bars he reportedly found in one of the 60 mountain huts.
June 3, 2025
Julie Power
Architecture
This idea helped build the Opera House and the Harbour Bridge. Could it save NSW heritage?
Experts say there is too little money to save heritage, and too much red tape. A lottery could help.
May 31, 2025
Julie Power
Architecture
The cake-shaped home that reimagines what a beach house can be
A Mollymook landmark for generations, Cakey was 'like living in a tent'. That has all changed.
May 27, 2025
Julie Power
Heritage
How the Paragon, the derelict grand dame of the Blue Mountains, could be saved
The owner of the Paragon Cafe in Katoomba has been ordered to secure the site, hire a heritage architect and detail what repairs need to be done.
May 16, 2025
Julie Power
Sydney councils
This North Sydney loo would have a world heritage view. Opponents say the idea stinks
One critic says the plan for the Opera House buffer zone was 'equivalent to placing a public toilet in the foreground of Notre Dame Cathedral'.
May 14, 2025
Julie Power
NSW residential property
The small but experimental granny flat that provides a perfect escape
Young architects Second Edition have created a new addition to a Bondi home using 'found' everything, even leftover concrete pours from other sites.
May 12, 2025
Julie Power

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The Age
8 hours ago
- The Age
Working from home – with Big Brother watching
Five years after the pandemic spread over the world, it's not clear if the employee or the employer is the winner from the prevalence of working from home. Screen-bound employees working remotely can avoid the time and expense of commuting, and companies can hire staff without the expense of paying for office space, but employees are also isolated, often disconnected, and occasionally tempted to wag during work hours. History suggests pandemics empower workers. In the Middle Ages, the Black Death shrunk the labour pool in Europe, giving the working class an awareness of its bargaining power. Today, however, technology may reverse the power balance. Digital tools used by employees working remotely are a source of endless information on their own activities. And it's information employers can track – often without an employee's awareness. The post-COVID office arrangement has left some companies snooping on their staff's productivity out-of-office. A 2021 global poll of 375 senior leaders found that in Australia, 91 per cent of respondents said they used monitoring software to keep tabs on employees working remotely. The poll commissioned by the law firm Herbert Smith Freehills found only 5 per cent of business leaders instead required employees to self-report. The reason employees can work from home – the laptop, the internet, mobile phones, Teams meetings – is also why they are so easily watched. Keyboard strokes, time in front of the computer, mouse movements, eye movements, and now, with the help of AI, even the tone of messages sent can be monitored. Kira Bomberg, marketing director for Mimecast Australia, said that before the pandemic lockdowns, her cybersecurity company looked for unusual email activity out of hours. This could be a potential sign of unauthorised access of information. Loading Three years since lockdowns ended, people have switched to hybrid work and their hours are adjusting, so looking for 'time-based' inconsistencies alone no longer captures cybersecurity risk, Bomberg says. Still, the company scans 98 million emails a day in Australia and New Zealand, and a full 1.1 billion a day globally. 'COVID saw the use of collaborative tools across businesses, the rise of Teams, Zoom, Slack,' she said. Those tools involve sharing documents and links, often with people outside the business. 'So the industry had to catch up with security on collaborative tools.' The company homes in on behavioural activities, looking for intruders who have harvested credentials, which is a very common activity. But the company also looks for 'disgruntled employee insiders'. The systems track movements of employee data and then, using a risk-scoring model looking for 'insider risk indicators', flag the employee's action for attention with the employer. Mimecast's Incydr product 'continuously' collects metadata as events are detected, the company's video says. 'Using artificial intelligence, we look for anomalies in speech patterns' of employees, Bomberg says. 'We ask: would a certain employee use this kind of language? Would he send questions to the finance team? Are these his normal greetings?' The monitoring means that every employee is subject to 24-seven surveillance – in their office and also, increasingly in the post-COVID era, in their home office, if they have one. Relying on AI to sift content can create 'false positives', Bomberg says – situations, events, exchanges are flagged as being suspicious when they are just outside normal patterns. Mimecast APAC field chief technology officer Ryan Economos says false positives aren't 'the most frequent result' and don't happen often. The company's 'focus is on identifying all forms of insider risk from employees, with the knowledge that most incidents are more often unintentional rather than stemming from disgruntled individuals', he says. While Mimecast is a human 'risk management platform' designed to provide cybersecurity, performance software does exist. In a separate, widely publicised case, Suzie Cheikho was fired from IAG insurance in February 2023 after 'the company's keystroke monitoring software detected low levels of activity while she was working remotely'. Draconian response A world of remote work has placed employers in a fog, which some have met with a Draconian response. In March, about 2000 staff at wealth management giant AMP were told to sign contracts that the finance union alleged would enable the company to carry out continuous video surveillance of them. After coming under fire for the clause, AMP eventually backtracked. In two cases that predate the pandemic, Sydney-based veteran IT executive Peter Croft says he discovered that a full-time tech employee was working a second job. 'They were doing the same job as the job they were doing for my company, in breach of their employment contract.' One employee's output was patchy, and the other simply spoke 'openly' about having a second job – to the point where the employee discussed needing to schedule meetings around it. The situation became unacceptable, he said. 'Funnily enough, they were quite willing to be very open about it.' Croft, however, says he doesn't see employees secretly holding two jobs as a 'huge trend'. Yet the reality of hybrid work further enables such HR capers. One WA-based IT consultant related a story on Reddit that occurred at a small start-up: 'We literally had a client escalate a case to us ... where an employee joined a company all-hands meeting from her company Teams account, on her company-provided laptop, with her camera background set to the corporate branding of what turned out to be her new employer, who was a major competitor, and she was yet to even provide notice.' The legality and acceptance of employer surveillance of employees working from home is a matter of debate. Loading There is generally more public acceptance of monitoring of people in transportation, construction roles or jobs that could physically endanger people, says University of Technology Sydney labour lawyer and academic Dr Joellen Riley Munton. For that reason, the law generally accepts the employer monitoring of employees, but with limits. In NSW, workplace surveillance legislation basically 'says the employer just needs to notify people that it is, in fact, watching them and how it's watching them, and then it can do so', Munton says. Employers have always monitored employees People forget that employers have always monitored employees, she says, looking back at the industrial era, when workers toiled in factories under the gaze of bosses. 'They've always harnessed our energies, and they've controlled our time. To some extent, we've become freer of that level of monitoring by being able to earn an income without necessarily fronting up at the factory and being strapped to machines. 'But by the same token the understandable desire of employers to want to make sure you're actually earning your salary means that they're introducing surveillance means. And some of those surveillance means are more intrusive than they would have once been.' The question is: just how intrusive, especially when phones, apps and gadgets produce endless streams of information to audit. Employee data can be mined and analysed on an anonymised basis, which is the business model for US-based Worklytics. The company says it does not provide employee-level monitoring services to clients, but instead tracks 'hundreds of real-time metrics' from Slack, Office 365 and Google workplace 'across meetings, emails, online interactions, document management and more'. This data, compiled and presented by the company, allows clients to understand manager effectiveness, wellbeing and burnout and sales effectiveness. Worklytics has no clients in Australia. Disconnect in expectations As working from home moves from a contingency plan to a way of life, companies are adjusting to the new reality. There appears to be a disconnect in expectations, even within companies. One social media poster said he received a 'work-from-the-office-or-else' email from management while working in an empty office. The manager who sent the email 'was himself working from home'. Distance allows more misunderstandings, too. In another case, an employee misinterpreted their manager's announcement of working from home as authorisation for them to also work remotely. By many indications, hybrid work (some in office, some from home) is here to stay. A recent report from the Australian HR Institute shows 'return to office' requirements are declining. The same polling found the top disadvantage of hybrid working was 'a feeling of disconnection between colleagues'. Loading In the hybrid arrangement, employees can fall through the cracks of management visibility, leaving them feeling disconnected. The already-unclear boundaries of employee surveillance are poised to become even blurrier as work and personal time blend. Writing in The Conversation, RMIT lecturer Melissa Wheeler describes a paradox between surveillance and performance. 'When surveillance is enforced, employers have greater control over the work that can be accomplished by employees. But it can also signal a lack of trust,' she said. 'By definition, seizing greater control is incompatible with communicating trust.' With so many employees working at distance, fostering and maintaining a level of trust is essential, she says. But trust, as well as commitment, may be in short supply as remote working becomes standard. Croft, the veteran executive, says that 'one of the byproducts of larger scale work from home is to prove the use-case that if things can be performed outside the office, they can be performed from anywhere'. There is no longer any 'real practical difference' between working from the suburbs of Sydney or working from the Philippines, Croft said. 'Potentially you're going to be competing with people who are based in some other part of the world for a role,' he said. 'I think everybody's aware of that.'

Sydney Morning Herald
8 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
‘Astonishing result': How super funds are faring amid Trump tariff volatility
One week out from the end of the financial year, analysts are predicting a strong annual performance for superannuation funds despite a year of market volatility caused by President Donald Trump's trade war and escalating conflict in the Middle East, including US involvement in Iran. Analysts from Chant West and SuperRatings predict Australian super funds, which manage a combined $4.2 trillion of members' money, are set to record positive returns for the 2024-25 financial year, the third year of growth in a row. Chant West has forecast that the median growth fund return for the year ending June 30 will be about 9 per cent, which is consistent with 9.1 per cent and 9.2 per cent for the financial years before this one. Figures from May showed returns were 2.7 per cent for that month. Chant West senior investment research manager Mano Mohankumar said the predicted results were a welcome surprise, given it has been a volatile year on financial markets. 'A final return close to 9 per cent would be an astonishing result in light of the volatility we've seen this past year. The [2024-45 financial year] experience highlights the importance of remaining patient and not getting distracted by short-term noise,' Mohankumar said. Loading Although super funds are performing within their typical long-term risk objectives of one year of negative returns in every five years on average (instead, there has been one every 6.4 years), global events causing market volatility have harmed super fund performance in the past. Examples include negative returns in 2008 and 2009 due to the global financial crisis and in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Major super funds, which are heavily invested in shares, were hit hard when markets tanked in April in response to Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs. But markets have recovered since then in response to Trump pausing his plans. The ASX 200 is up almost 10 per cent in the past year and Wall Street's S&P500 has risen 9.5 per cent. Even so, analysts have predicted more volatility ahead due to uncertainty over Trump's policies and geopolitical risks, including the escalating conflict in the Middle East.

Sydney Morning Herald
8 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Working from home – with Big Brother watching
Five years after the pandemic spread over the world, it's not clear if the employee or the employer is the winner from the prevalence of working from home. Screen-bound employees working remotely can avoid the time and expense of commuting, and companies can hire staff without the expense of paying for office space, but employees are also isolated, often disconnected, and occasionally tempted to wag during work hours. History suggests pandemics empower workers. In the Middle Ages, the Black Death shrunk the labour pool in Europe, giving the working class an awareness of its bargaining power. Today, however, technology may reverse the power balance. Digital tools used by employees working remotely are a source of endless information on their own activities. And it's information employers can track – often without an employee's awareness. The post-COVID office arrangement has left some companies snooping on their staff's productivity out-of-office. A 2021 global poll of 375 senior leaders found that in Australia, 91 per cent of respondents said they used monitoring software to keep tabs on employees working remotely. The poll commissioned by the law firm Herbert Smith Freehills found only 5 per cent of business leaders instead required employees to self-report. The reason employees can work from home – the laptop, the internet, mobile phones, Teams meetings – is also why they are so easily watched. Keyboard strokes, time in front of the computer, mouse movements, eye movements, and now, with the help of AI, even the tone of messages sent can be monitored. Kira Bomberg, marketing director for Mimecast Australia, said that before the pandemic lockdowns, her cybersecurity company looked for unusual email activity out of hours. This could be a potential sign of unauthorised access of information. Loading Three years since lockdowns ended, people have switched to hybrid work and their hours are adjusting, so looking for 'time-based' inconsistencies alone no longer captures cybersecurity risk, Bomberg says. Still, the company scans 98 million emails a day in Australia and New Zealand, and a full 1.1 billion a day globally. 'COVID saw the use of collaborative tools across businesses, the rise of Teams, Zoom, Slack,' she said. Those tools involve sharing documents and links, often with people outside the business. 'So the industry had to catch up with security on collaborative tools.' The company homes in on behavioural activities, looking for intruders who have harvested credentials, which is a very common activity. But the company also looks for 'disgruntled employee insiders'. The systems track movements of employee data and then, using a risk-scoring model looking for 'insider risk indicators', flag the employee's action for attention with the employer. Mimecast's Incydr product 'continuously' collects metadata as events are detected, the company's video says. 'Using artificial intelligence, we look for anomalies in speech patterns' of employees, Bomberg says. 'We ask: would a certain employee use this kind of language? Would he send questions to the finance team? Are these his normal greetings?' The monitoring means that every employee is subject to 24-seven surveillance – in their office and also, increasingly in the post-COVID era, in their home office, if they have one. Relying on AI to sift content can create 'false positives', Bomberg says – situations, events, exchanges are flagged as being suspicious when they are just outside normal patterns. Mimecast APAC field chief technology officer Ryan Economos says false positives aren't 'the most frequent result' and don't happen often. The company's 'focus is on identifying all forms of insider risk from employees, with the knowledge that most incidents are more often unintentional rather than stemming from disgruntled individuals', he says. While Mimecast is a human 'risk management platform' designed to provide cybersecurity, performance software does exist. In a separate, widely publicised case, Suzie Cheikho was fired from IAG insurance in February 2023 after 'the company's keystroke monitoring software detected low levels of activity while she was working remotely'. Draconian response A world of remote work has placed employers in a fog, which some have met with a Draconian response. In March, about 2000 staff at wealth management giant AMP were told to sign contracts that the finance union alleged would enable the company to carry out continuous video surveillance of them. After coming under fire for the clause, AMP eventually backtracked. In two cases that predate the pandemic, Sydney-based veteran IT executive Peter Croft says he discovered that a full-time tech employee was working a second job. 'They were doing the same job as the job they were doing for my company, in breach of their employment contract.' One employee's output was patchy, and the other simply spoke 'openly' about having a second job – to the point where the employee discussed needing to schedule meetings around it. The situation became unacceptable, he said. 'Funnily enough, they were quite willing to be very open about it.' Croft, however, says he doesn't see employees secretly holding two jobs as a 'huge trend'. Yet the reality of hybrid work further enables such HR capers. One WA-based IT consultant related a story on Reddit that occurred at a small start-up: 'We literally had a client escalate a case to us ... where an employee joined a company all-hands meeting from her company Teams account, on her company-provided laptop, with her camera background set to the corporate branding of what turned out to be her new employer, who was a major competitor, and she was yet to even provide notice.' The legality and acceptance of employer surveillance of employees working from home is a matter of debate. Loading There is generally more public acceptance of monitoring of people in transportation, construction roles or jobs that could physically endanger people, says University of Technology Sydney labour lawyer and academic Dr Joellen Riley Munton. For that reason, the law generally accepts the employer monitoring of employees, but with limits. In NSW, workplace surveillance legislation basically 'says the employer just needs to notify people that it is, in fact, watching them and how it's watching them, and then it can do so', Munton says. Employers have always monitored employees People forget that employers have always monitored employees, she says, looking back at the industrial era, when workers toiled in factories under the gaze of bosses. 'They've always harnessed our energies, and they've controlled our time. To some extent, we've become freer of that level of monitoring by being able to earn an income without necessarily fronting up at the factory and being strapped to machines. 'But by the same token the understandable desire of employers to want to make sure you're actually earning your salary means that they're introducing surveillance means. And some of those surveillance means are more intrusive than they would have once been.' The question is: just how intrusive, especially when phones, apps and gadgets produce endless streams of information to audit. Employee data can be mined and analysed on an anonymised basis, which is the business model for US-based Worklytics. The company says it does not provide employee-level monitoring services to clients, but instead tracks 'hundreds of real-time metrics' from Slack, Office 365 and Google workplace 'across meetings, emails, online interactions, document management and more'. This data, compiled and presented by the company, allows clients to understand manager effectiveness, wellbeing and burnout and sales effectiveness. Worklytics has no clients in Australia. Disconnect in expectations As working from home moves from a contingency plan to a way of life, companies are adjusting to the new reality. There appears to be a disconnect in expectations, even within companies. One social media poster said he received a 'work-from-the-office-or-else' email from management while working in an empty office. The manager who sent the email 'was himself working from home'. Distance allows more misunderstandings, too. In another case, an employee misinterpreted their manager's announcement of working from home as authorisation for them to also work remotely. By many indications, hybrid work (some in office, some from home) is here to stay. A recent report from the Australian HR Institute shows 'return to office' requirements are declining. The same polling found the top disadvantage of hybrid working was 'a feeling of disconnection between colleagues'. Loading In the hybrid arrangement, employees can fall through the cracks of management visibility, leaving them feeling disconnected. The already-unclear boundaries of employee surveillance are poised to become even blurrier as work and personal time blend. Writing in The Conversation, RMIT lecturer Melissa Wheeler describes a paradox between surveillance and performance. 'When surveillance is enforced, employers have greater control over the work that can be accomplished by employees. But it can also signal a lack of trust,' she said. 'By definition, seizing greater control is incompatible with communicating trust.' With so many employees working at distance, fostering and maintaining a level of trust is essential, she says. But trust, as well as commitment, may be in short supply as remote working becomes standard. Croft, the veteran executive, says that 'one of the byproducts of larger scale work from home is to prove the use-case that if things can be performed outside the office, they can be performed from anywhere'. There is no longer any 'real practical difference' between working from the suburbs of Sydney or working from the Philippines, Croft said. 'Potentially you're going to be competing with people who are based in some other part of the world for a role,' he said. 'I think everybody's aware of that.'