Nino Bucci

Nino Bucci is a journalist at The Guardian Australia. His reporting focuses on technology and cybersecurity<dummy00015> the global context. He has covered major incidents such as the CrowdStrike Rolling Out Fix outage, which affected millions of devices worldwide. In addition to his technical reporting, Nino has been recognized for his investigative journalism in Indigenous affairs, winning a Quill award for excellence alongside colleague Blake Sharp-Wiggins. Their investigation into pedestrian deaths in the Northern Territory was praised for its balanced use of statistical evidence, research findings and interviews. The article demonstrated a commitment to delivering a comprehensive narrative without injecting editorial bias and showed due respect to all parties involved. Nino's work often explores the intersection of technology, security, and social issues.

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The Daily's Verdict

This author is known for its high journalistic standards. The author strives to maintain neutrality and transparency in its reporting, and avoids conflicts of interest. The author has a reputation for accuracy and rarely gets contradicted on major discrepancies in its reporting.

Bias

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Examples:

No current examples available.

Conflicts of Interest

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Examples:

No current examples available.

Contradictions

85%

Examples:

  • The economy is being worked on to get back online but there's no mention of flight cancellations or delays in the article.
  • The number of affected devices worldwide is estimated to be around 8.5m in the article but only around 2,300 flights were canceled in the US article.

Deceptions

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Examples:

No current examples available.

Recent Articles

Crowdstrike's Flawed Update Causes Global IT Outage, Disrupting Millions of Devices and Services

Crowdstrike's Flawed Update Causes Global IT Outage, Disrupting Millions of Devices and Services

Broke On: Friday, 19 July 2024 A global IT outage caused by a flawed Crowdstrike update affected 8.5 million Windows devices, disrupting flights, government services, and businesses worldwide. The malfunction in Crowdstrike's Falcon software led to cancellations of over 5,000 flights and delays for thousands more. Government services in Australia were also impacted, with scammers taking advantage of the situation to spread malware. Microsoft advised users to uninstall the problematic update until a fix was available. The incident caused significant disruptions in commercial air service and serves as a reminder of the importance of having contingency plans.