Episodit
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The government wants to streamline regulations, but marine advocates worry the changes would make fishing less transparent and expedite destruction of the ocean …
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With trademark applications surging, The Detail looks at what it takes to get a mark registered in New Zealand…
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Puuttuva jakso?
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In Donald Trump's firing line, foreign leaders decide whether to butter up or shout back
Former New Zealand Ambassador to the US Tim Groser explains the tightrope walk of pleasing Donald Trump…
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Swindles, scams and deception take centre-stage at Wellington's highly specific documentary film festival
The Wellington Fraud Film Festival will showcase a collection of documentaries covering all types of deceptions. It's a topic that's become increasingly relatable for New Zealanders.
Next Monday in Wellington, some 150 people will fill the Roxy Cinema for a niche documentary film festival. But they won't be the usual film festival crowd of movie buffs - they'll be lawyers, police officers, bankers, and anyone else whose work deals with scams or fraud.
The Fraud Film Festival, an offshoot of the original version of the festival in the Netherlands, has been running in New Zealand since 2016. On the surface, it seems extremely specialised. But in reality, fraud is something that touches most people - a BNZ survey last year found that 87 percent of New Zealanders were targeted by scams in the 12 months prior…Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
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Today marks six years since the Christchurch mosque attacks. One couple's new documentary honours the lives lost - and the lives changed as a result
Project 51 changed lives in Afghanistan, in the name of the 51 victims of the Christchurch mosque attacks. Now a documentary follows the story…
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The school lunch debacle has deteriorated so much that there is an increasing clamour to rip it up and start again
In treating school lunches as a service rather than an investment, penny pinching risks raising costs above value
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The bill passed its first reading in Parliament last month, but one trade feels the amendment is a live wire…
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New Zealand is after a trade slice of rapidly growing Vietnam, and a new agreement should strengthen those connections.
Vietnam is one of the fastest growing economies in the world, and is making trade connections at pace, including with New Zealand…
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New building products being tested at Auckland University may be the answer to restless summer nights in city apartments…
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On Auckland's North Shore, a public golf course is fighting council plans to use their course as a floodwater catchment
Auckland Council wants to turn public land into a water catchment to protect against floods. The current leaseholders say there's a better way.
A stoush is brewing on Auckland's North Shore over a controversial proposal to convert Takapuna Golf Course into a floodwater catchment area, aiming to mitigate the city's increasing flood risks…
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In a world where misinformation and disinformation are rampant, the website has become an unlikely source of truth…
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Canadians are united in their horror over US tariffs that have the power to plunge the country into recession and cause mass unemployment
Donald Trump's tariffs will cause huge damage to the Canadian economy and the countries' relationship, but the reasons behind the move remain both spurious and obscure
US President Donald Trump's trade war against Canada is fodder for America's flabbergasted late night comedy hosts, but north of the border, no one is laughing.
Known universally for just being ... nice, Canadians have gone from anxious to angry as America slaps 25 percent trade tariffs on its imports - a move that could send Canada into recession.
In the Ontario province alone, an estimated half a million jobs could go.
"People are really angry in this country at the United States," says the host of CBC's Front Burner podcast, Jayme Poisson…Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
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Up to 300 New Zealanders a year are administered electric shock treatment - and the vast majority are happier for it
Electroconvulsive Therapy has had a bad rap in films and media for decades - in some cases, deservedly so. A specialist explains why the stigma is not warranted.…
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Tens of thousands of handsets and other devices are likely to become redundant by the end of the year as NZ shuts down the 3G phone network
As New Zealand works to pull the plug on the 3G network by Christmas, telecos aim to avoid the debacle that happened in Australia when it did the same last year
Paul Brislen is on a mission this year and it could probably be summed up as 'don't stuff things up like Australia did'.
It's to do with New Zealand's 3G networks being shut down by the end of 2025, and upgraded to the next generation of technology.
It's a world-wide move and Australia turned its 3G off last year. The trouble is, the repercussions are still going on there - to the extent that a Senate committee is investigating why some customers were left worse off, unable to make calls or send text messages in areas where they previously could - and that included emergency calls…Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
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The government wants to make retail a safer work environment by allowing citizens arrest. One legal expert fears the change will have the opposite effect.
Under an ammended law, citizens will have the power to detain criminals at any time, for any crime. But one law professor says retail workers aren't trained to police - and the fallout could be serious.…
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A claim we're not paying enough attention to giving our children the ability to sort out what's real and what's not in the murky depths of the internet
Macleans College in Auckland is giving its media studies students the tools to deal with mis and disinformation, but their teacher wants to see those lessons more widespread…
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A new book promises to lift the lid on the history of Wellington's Indian community in ways that would surprise most people
There's more to the Indian community than stories of migrant exploitation and overstaying - and a new book opens the lid on its history…
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Media oversight and regulation is described as messy, and screen productions desperately need help. Changes are in the wind.
The government is making changes over the rules and structures around publicly funded screen and media, industries that are on their knees
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More people are using 'SovCit' arguments in court, engaging in so-called 'paper terrorism'
Sovereign citizens believe they are exempt the laws of New Zealand. But that doesn't stop the law from coming after them.…
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A supposed shaken baby case is raising questions over the misdiagnosis of injured infants, with authorities rushing to lay the blame on parents…
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