Hello Australia!! - Social media struggles to scrape off a terrorist's pride - More similarities between the 737 MAX 8 crashes - Banks plan London evacuations in case of a hard Brexit - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says her office received an email of the Christchurch shooter's "manifesto", just minutes before he began his assault on two mosques.  But the email did not specify where the 28-year old Australian suspect Brenton Tarrant would attack:  "I want to give assurances that (if it had) provided details that could have been acted upon immediately, it would have been," Ms. Ardern said, "Unfortunately, there were no such details in that email."  The death toll from the mosque massacre was raised to 50 lives lost after the discovery of another body at one of the two major crime scenes. 

Facebook says it removed 1.5 million video uploads from people who tried to share the video of the Christchurch Massacre taken from the gunman's headcam within 24 hours of the shooting.  The gunman live-streamed the attack for about 17 minutes, and Facebook became aware of the problem about an hour later, a situation which allowed the video to be shared and copied ad nauseum.  Social networks have the technical ability to have  servers instantly target and remove a specific video, but ne'er-do-wells often get around this with tricks such as editing it to flip left and right, remove small sections, or even record an entirely new version off the screen of a computer.

Flight data from this month's Ethiopian Airlines crash shows "clear similarities" with the Lion Air crash off Indonesia last year.  Both crashes, which killed 346 people, involved Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft, now largely banned from flying in countries around the world.  "Clear similarities were noted between Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 and Indonesian Lion Air Flight 610, which would be the subject of further study during the investigation," said Dagmawit Moges.  In both cases, the aircraft's altitude had fluctuated sharply as the planes seemed to experience erratic climbs and descents before eventually crashing.  The similarities could point to a possible design flaw in the popular aircraft.

Thousands of people in Addis Ababa mourned Ethiopian victims of the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crash.  Mourners paraded 17 empty coffins through the streets, because the human remains will be part of the investigation for some time to come.  Family members confirmed they were given a one kilogram sack of scorched earth taken from the crash site for mourning purposes. 

London's big banks are preparing a mass exodus in case the Brexit happens on 29 March without a deal to cushion the blow.  The Guardian reports about 400 JP Morgan bankers have bags packed for last-minute moves to Frankfurt, Luxembourg, and Dublin - each a rival financial hub.  US banker Goldman Sachs has already moved 150 workers to other offices in the European Union; they could be joined by dozens more on 29 March, swelling to as many as 700 relocations.  In fact, getting a parking space in the banking center of London known as "the Square Mile" could get a lot easier, as Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland, and others shift hundreds and hundreds more jobs to the EU. 

France's opposition is blasting the government for being unprepared for the renewed Yellow Vest protests in Paris.  Protesters targeted high end stores such as Zara, Longchamp, and the famous Le Fouquet's brasserie for vandalism and arson.  "No one can say that the necessary security measures were in place," said Jean-Christophe Lagarde of the centrist Union of Democrats and Independents party.  Paris' Socialist Mayor Anne Hidalgo demanded a meeting with the government and the far-right Les Republicains said the Macron government allowed the situation to "degenerate".