Publication
Review of the Data Availability and Transparency Act: Progress or paralysis?
The Data Availability and Transparency Act 2022 (Cth) (Act) aims to unlock value in public sector data for the benefit of Australians.
Global | Publication | August 2024
Why you should update your dawn raid guidance
Unannounced inspections or ‘dawn raids’ are used by antitrust authorities to obtain evidence when there are suspicions that individuals or businesses have infringed the antitrust rules. Often triggered by tip-offs from whistleblowers or confessions from leniency applicants, dawn raids provide investigators with an opportunity to swoop and seize information for subsequent interrogation and review. The surprise element of dawn raids offers reassurances to investigators that evidence of a possible infringement will not be destroyed.
Many businesses will have protocols for responding to a dawn raid. Typically, these include notes for receptionists on what do to if investigators arrive and detailed guidance for compliance teams about the need to ‘shadow’ investigators as they move around the office and to photocopy all documents before they are taken away. The issue that these protocols ought to cover – but often don’t – is how to deal with the arrival of digital forensic investigators.
Publication
The Data Availability and Transparency Act 2022 (Cth) (Act) aims to unlock value in public sector data for the benefit of Australians.
Publication
As discussed in our previous look at the 2025 proxy season, the rapid development of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies has elevated AI to a core governance concern for shareholders, and as AI continues to dominate headlines, the urgency of finding a balance between transparency, responsibility, and return on investment for shareholders is likely to spur a growing number of AI-related shareholder proposals in the coming years.
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