Category: AI

  • The world’s first legislative regime on the use and development of AI has passed its final hurdle in the European Parliament, three months after it received provisional agreement. The greenlight comes as the Australian government considers introducing exemptions from local regulatory scrutiny if AI technologies are already comply with tough regimes in other jurisdictions. The…

    The post World’s first AI Act passes final hurdle appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • UN Report Unveils Strategies to Shield Child, Youth Human Rights Defenders
    UN Report Unveils Strategies to Shield Child, Youth Human Rights Defenders

    Emmanuel Abara Benson, on 6 March 2024, unveils in BNN a new UN report which highlights the challenges faced by young activists, advocating for global support and legal frameworks to safeguard their rights and efforts:

    Amnesty International heralds a new UN report as a significant advancement for young activists worldwide, set to be introduced by UN Special Rapporteur Mary Lawlor during the 55th Session of the Human Rights Council on 12 March 2024. The document, titled “We are not just the future”: challenges faced by child and youth human rights defenders”, highlights the unique challenges faced by young activists, including oppression, age-based discrimination, and barriers to resources and legal aid.

    The report by Mary Lawlor sheds light on the considerable obstacles child and youth defenders encounter, such as intimidation, threats, and attacks, both in physical and digital realms. Amnesty International’s Sara Vida Coumans emphasizes the overdue recognition of the distinct experiences and adversities young defenders face compared to their adult counterparts. The report also addresses the issue of “gatekeeping” by adult-led groups, which hampers the ability of young activists to access necessary resources and participate in decision-making processes.

    Amnesty International has documented numerous instances of abuses against young human rights defenders. Examples include Fatima Movlamli from Azerbaijan and Mahmoud Hussein from Egypt, who faced intimidation and arbitrary detention, respectively, due to their activism. Moreover, the report mentions the plight of child climate defender Leonela Moncayo in Ecuador, who was intimidated with an explosive device outside her home, highlighting the risks young activists face. The organization calls for governments worldwide to heed the Special Rapporteur’s recommendations, particularly in providing legal aid and support for young defenders. See also: https://humanrightsdefenders.blog/2023/11/13/hrw-submission-to-special-rapporteur-focuses-on-child-and-youth-human-rights-defenders/

    The document not only brings to the forefront the specific challenges faced by child and young human rights defenders but also underscores the importance of global support and legal frameworks to safeguard these individuals. By spotlighting the adverse impact of social media, the right to peaceful assembly, and the effects of climate change on young people, the report advocates for a more inclusive and supportive environment for young activists. Governments are urged to adopt the recommendations, recognizing the vital role of young defenders in advocating for human rights and democratic reforms.

    This groundbreaking report marks a pivotal moment in the recognition and support of child and young human rights defenders. By highlighting the unique challenges they face and offering targeted strategies for protection, the UN and Amnesty International are paving the way for a more inclusive and equitable future for young activists. The global community’s response to these recommendations will be instrumental in ensuring that young voices are not only heard, but also protected in their brave efforts to defend human rights.

    https://bnnbreaking.com/breaking-news/human/un-report-unveils-strategies-to-shield-child-youth-human-rights-defenders

    This post was originally published on Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders and their awards.

  • At the heart of any significant warship is the combat management system. Integration with other CMS is one of the directions that today’s developers are following. Serving as the combat brain of a warship, a Combat Management System (CMS) is able to provide an analysis of any emerging threats and thereby deliver options to a […]

    The post CMS: More Inputs, Quicker Solutions appeared first on Asian Military Review.

    This post was originally published on Asian Military Review.

  • The federal government is considering allowing AI technologies that have already satisfied tough regulatory requirements overseas to be deployed with fewer checks in the Australian market. In an effort to encourage consistency with increasing global regulation of AI, Australia’s new “guardrails” for high-risk applications could include recognition of compliance with foreign schemes, like the European…

    The post Govt mulls foreign AI fast lane for regulatory approvals appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Late last week, OpenAI announced a new generative AI system named Sora, which produces short videos from text prompts. While Sora is not yet available to the public, the high quality of the sample outputs published so far has provoked both excited and concerned reactions. The sample videos published by OpenAI, which the company says…

    The post Sora: This GenAI video tool could amplify disinformation risks appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • A new AI competition for startups has been launched by the CSIRO’s National AI Centre in collaboration with Google Cloud and co-working space Stone and Chalk. Over three months startups will participate in ‘Australia’s AI Sprint’, which will provides access to tools, resources and expert support to help bring their AI-powered ideas into demonstration-ready prototypes…

    The post CSIRO targets startups for AI commercialisation program appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Industry and Science minister Ed Husic says the federal government remains open to providing additional support for the development of sovereign AI capabilities, but that overseas examples suggest much of this work will be driven “largely off the back of private capital”. Mr Husic said the development of large language models in Australia was important,…

    The post Govt mulls additional support for sovereign AI appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Options and thresholds for regulating artificial intelligence in Australia will be developed over the next five months by renowned artificial intelligence expert Toby Walsh, the CSIRO’s chief scientist Bronwyn Fox and intellectual property barrister Angus Lang. The three experts are part of a 12-person Artificial Intelligence Expert Group to be fully unveiled by Industry and…

    The post Experts tapped to develop Australia’s AI rules appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • AUKUS security partners – Australia, the United Kingdom, and the United States –have successfully validated integration of advanced autonomy and artificial intelligence (AI) in unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) that were used in a contested environment, the Australian Department of Defence (DoD) announced on 6 February. The DoD said the Trusted Operation of Robotic Vehicles in […]

    The post Australia supports latest autonomous robotics demonstration under AUKUS banner appeared first on Asian Military Review.

    This post was originally published on Asian Military Review.

  • New South Wales has begun a six-month trial of a blended generative artificial intelligence app in the state’s public schools, giving students and teachers access to multiple large language models in an educational setting. From this week, 16 primary and secondary schools will gain access to the app, which has been purpose-built by the NSW…

    The post Profanity-free AI trial begins in NSW schools appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • A view of the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, D.C., on May 28, 2020.

    On 31 January 2024 several NGOs – including HRW and AI -came out in support of a bill in the US Senate. Senator Ben Cardin introduced the Human Rights Defenders Protection Act of 2024, which aims to protect individuals abroad “who face reprisals for defending human rights and democracy.” The law, if enacted, would strengthen the US government’s ability to “prevent, mitigate, and respond” to such cases.

    Senator Cardin said this legislation “will help elevate, guide, and enhance US efforts to support these courageous individuals globally at a time when their efforts are more important than ever.”  

    HRW said: The bill would integrate support for rights defenders into various US policies and programs and encourage engagement with the private sector. It aims to improve assistance for rights defenders living in exile from their home countries and strengthen US tools to hold perpetrators of rights abuses accountable. Human Rights Watch has long documented the risks, threats, and attacks that rights defenders across the globe face. In Rwanda, for example, the government for many years has targeted with impunity rights defenders at home and extended its repression beyond its borders to silence Rwandan critics living abroad. Last December, the Emirati government brought new charges under its counterterrorism law against 87 activists and dissidents, including imprisoned rights defender Ahmed Mansoor.

    The proposed legislation would create a new US visa for rights defenders who face a “credible fear of an urgent threat,” allowing those who qualify to reach safety before they are detained or harmed. It would also increase the number of US government personnel dedicated to democracy and human rights issues in the federal government and at embassies in countries with a high risk of rights abuses. 

    Andrew Fandino, Advocacy Director for the Individuals at Risk Program at Amnesty International USA. stated: “The Human Rights Defenders Protection Act of 2024 is a critical piece of legislation that will help strengthen and improve the U.S. government’s ability to support human rights defenders around the world,” ..“With over 401 human rights defenders killed globally in 2022 alone, now more than ever, human rights defenders need this additional support and protection.”

    If passed, the legislation would require the US government to establish a “Global Strategy for Human Rights Defenders.” The strategy would survey current tools and resources to support human rights, identify how the government would prioritize and bolster protections for rights defenders, and establish specific goals for implementing the legislation’s policy objectives. This would link to the existing EU Guidelines on Human Rights Defenders (2008), and the OSCE Guidelines on the Protection of Human Rights Defenders (2014) and those of a small group of European countries.

    https://www.amnestyusa.org/press-releases/amnesty-international-usa-supports-legislation-that-ensures-u-s-support-and-protections-for-human-rights-defenders-around-the-world

    https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/01/31/proposed-us-law-would-protect-human-rights-defenders

    https://www.foreign.senate.gov/press/dem/release/chair-cardin-speaks-in-support-of-courageous-human-rights-defenders-around-the-world

    This post was originally published on Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders and their awards.

  • The Productivity Commission believes Australia is not well positioned to produce its own advanced artificial intelligence models and doubts the productivity benefits of “activist government ‘sponsorship’” across the AI value chain. Instead, the government should focus on encouraging safe AI adoption across the economy by providing regulatory clarity and certainty while acting as an exemplar…

    The post PC casts doubt on Australia’s ‘activist’ AI support appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones has thrown his support behind an AI regulation model that is directed at activity and harms rather than the technology itself, as the government starts exploring “bespoke” guardrails this year. Earlier this month, Industry and Science Minister Ed Husic revealed a yet to be appointed panel of experts will explore new…

    The post Focus AI regulation on harms, not tech: Jones appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • The federal government’s recently released interim response to regulating artificial intelligence is (understandably) short on detail, but appears to say all the right things in an attempt to balance the need for innovation with the desire to maintain a semblance of control over a scary new technology. It’s a tough gig, and regulating disruption is…

    The post Red flags or not, AI regulation must look to the future appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Universities are calling for a National Centre for AI in education to share best practice and costly infrastructure, warning researchers and educators are currently reliant on foreign vendors and their models as the technology races ahead. “Our dependence on large technology providers for this technology is something that I think we have to think about…

    The post Foreign vendor ‘dependence’ risking Aussie AI opportunity appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • A bevy of government tech projects, procurements and landmark legislation will go under the microscope in 2024, as the Albanese government pledges better outcomes in the last full year of its first term. Early and important Senate inquiries will start looking at the upcoming $700 million digital ID scheme, as well as controversial changes to…

    The post Tech projects and consultants to feel the heat in 2024 appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Amnesty International Logotype

    On 22 January 2024, Amnesty International published an interesting piece by Alex, a 31-year-old Romanian activist working at the intersection of human rights, technology and public policy.

    Seeking to use her experience and knowledge of tech for political change, Alex applied and was accepted onto the Digital Forensics Fellowship led by the Security Lab at Amnesty Tech. The Digital Forensics Fellowship (DFF) is an opportunity for human rights defenders (HRDs) working at the nexus of human rights and technology and expand their learning.

    Here, Alex shares her activism journey and insight into how like-minded human rights defenders can join the fight against spyware:

    In the summer of 2022, I watched a recording of Claudio Guarnieri, former Head of the Amnesty Tech Security Lab, presenting about Security Without Borders at the 2016 Chaos Communication Congress. After following the investigations of the Pegasus Project and other projects centring on spyware being used on journalists and human rights defenders, his call to action at the end — “Find a cause and assist others” — resonated with me long after I watched the talk.

    Becoming a tech activist

    A few days later, Amnesty Tech announced the launch of the Digital Forensics Fellowship (DFF). It was serendipity, and I didn’t question it. At that point, I had already pushed myself to seek out a more political, more involved way to share my knowledge. Not tech for the sake of tech, but tech activism to ensure political change.

    Portrait of a young woman with dark hair looking downwards in a thoughtful manner
    Alex is a 31-year-old Romanian activist, working at the intersection of human rights, technology and public policy.

    I followed an atypical path for a technologist. Prior to university, I dreamt of being a published fiction author, only to switch to studying industrial automation in college. I spent five years as a developer in the IT industry and two as Chief Technology Officer for an NGO, where I finally found myself using my tech knowledge to support journalists and activists.

    My approach to technology, like my approach to art, is informed by political struggles, as well as the questioning of how one can lead a good life. My advocacy for digital rights follows this thread. For me, technology is merely one of many tools at the disposal of humanity, and it should never be a barrier to decent living, nor an oppressive tool for anyone.

    Technology is merely one of many tools at the disposal of humanity. It should never be a barrier to decent living, nor an oppressive tool for anyone.

    The opportunity offered by the DFF matched my interests and the direction I wanted to take my activism. During the year-long training programme from 2022-2023, the things I learned turned out to be valuable for my advocacy work.

    In 2022, the Child Sexual Abuse Regulation was proposed in the EU. I focused on conducting advocacy to make it as clear as possible that losing encrypted communication would make life decidedly worse for everyone in the EU. We ran a campaign to raise awareness of the importance of end-to-end encryption for journalists, activists and people in general. Our communication unfolded under the banner of “you don’t realize how precious encryption is until you’ve lost it”. Apti.ro, the Romanian non-profit organisation that I work with, also participated in the EU-wide campaign, as part of the EDRi coalition. To add fuel to the fire, spyware scandals erupted across the EU. My home country, Romania, borders countries where spyware has been proven to have been used to invade the personal lives of journalists, political opponents of the government and human rights defenders.

    The meaning of being a Fellow

    The Security Lab provided us with theoretical and practical sessions on digital forensics, while the cohort was a safe, vibrant space to discuss challenges we were facing. We debugged together and discussed awful surveillance technology at length, contributing our own local perspective.

    The importance of building cross-border networks of cooperation and solidarity became clear to me during the DFF. I heard stories of struggles from people involved in large and small organizations alike. I am convinced our struggles are intertwined, and we should join forces whenever possible.

    Now when I’m working with other activists, I try not to talk of “forensics”. Instead, I talk about keeping ourselves safe, and our conversations private. Often, discussions we have as activists are about caring for a particular part of our lives – our safety when protesting, our confidentiality when organizing, our privacy when convening online. Our devices and data are part of this process, as is our physical body. At the end of the day, digital forensics are just another form of caring for ourselves.

    I try to shape discussions about people’s devices similarly to how doctors discuss the symptoms of an illness. The person whose device is at the centre of the discussion is the best judge of the symptoms, and it’s important to never minimize their apprehension. It’s also important to go through the steps of the forensics in a way that allows them to understand what is happening and what the purpose of the procedure is.

    I never use a one-size-fits-all approach because the situation of the person who owns a device informs the ways it might be targeted or infected.

    The human approach to technology

    My work is human-centred and technology-focused and requires care and concentration to achieve meaningful results. For activists interested in working on digital forensics, start by digging deep into the threats you see in your local context. If numerous phishing campaigns are unfolding, dig into network forensics and map out the owners of the domains and the infrastructure.

    Secondly, get to know the person you are working with. If they are interested in secure communications, help them gain a better understanding of mobile network-based attacks, as well as suggesting instant messaging apps that preserve the privacy and the security of their users. In time, they will be able to spot “empty words” used to market messaging apps that are not end-to-end encrypted.

    Finally, to stay true to the part of me that loves a well-told story, read not only reports of ongoing spyware campaigns, but narrative explorations from people involved. “Pegasus: The Story of the World’s Most Dangerous Spyware” by Laurent Richard and Sandrine Rigaud is a good example that documents both the human and the technical aspects. The Shoot the Messenger podcast, by PRX and Exile Content Studio, is also great as it focuses on Pegasus, starting from the brutal murder of Jamal Khashoggi to the recent infection of the device of journalist and founder of Meduza, Galina Timchenko.

    We must continue to do this research, however difficult it may be, and to tell the stories of those impacted by these invasive espionage tactics. Without this work we wouldn’t be making the political progress we’ve seen to stem the development and use of this atrocious technology.

    https://www.amnesty.org/en/search/Alex/

    This post was originally published on Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders and their awards.

  • There aren’t many one-year old’s that can punch out a poem and write an essay in three seconds flat. In fact, ChatGPT has accomplished a lot in its first year around the sun. The rise of generative AI has made employees fearful for their jobs, created an ethical dilemma for university lecturers, and taken away…

    The post Govt has lost sight of Australia’s AI opportunity appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • The Albanese government’s initial response to AI regulation has set a “philosophical” direction but locks in little as the technology advances rapidly and other jurisdictions ramp up investment. Experts say the pace must increase and come with government investment if Australia is to reap the rewards of the technology. Industry and Science minister Ed Husic…

    The post ‘Light on and late’: Govt urged to put the foot down on AI safety appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • There is too much focus in Australia on trying to regulate the downside risk of artificial intelligence, and too little on securing its upside benefits, according to Professor Anton van den Hengel, a global leader in computer vision and machine learning based at the University of Adelaide. While the federal government has put its efforts…

    The post Too much focus on AI downside, not enough investment appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • On 15 January 2024, Amnesty International announced that five courageous human rights defenders from around the world have shared their hard-hitting stories on its new podcast: ‘On the Side of Humanity. How human rights defenders fight for our present and future’.

    The three-part series was released to mark the 25th anniversary of the UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders. The documentary explores how the human rights movement has evolved since the adoption of the watershed declaration.

    In the podcast, Amnesty International’s Tatyana Movshevich discovers the story behind the declaration and meets brave activists from Chile, the USA, Nepal, Ireland and Ghana, all of whom have been fighting for the rights of marginalized people — and risking their lives in the process.

    “Every day, human rights defenders are risking their lives, sometimes at a significant personal cost. They experience violence and discrimination simply for defending the rights of others,” said Tatyana Movshevich, Amnesty International’s Campaigner.

    “For this podcast I have interviewed five incredible human rights defenders and it was inspiring to hear about their work, but also distressing to realise the enormous dangers they are facing. During our interview, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, a journalist from Ghana, told me a chilling story of how his investigation into killings linked to ritual magic in Malawi had gone terribly wrong. And it was not the only time when Anas found himself in mortal danger because of his human rights work. Far from it.”

    Every day, human rights defenders are risking their lives, sometimes at a significant personal cost.Tatyana Movshevich, Amnesty International’s Campaigner

    Others featured in the podcast include Lorena Donaire, a water defender from Chile whose life was turned upside down as she was tackling the catastrophic results of a mega-drought; Monica Simpson, a queer activist and artist from the USA and Durga Sob, a Dalit woman and Nepalese feminist activist, who have both been confronting long-ignored issues of racism and caste-based discrimination; and Sean Binder, a migrant rights defender from Ireland whose freedom was compromised while he was volunteering on an idyllic Greek island. [see lso: https://humanrightsdefenders.blog/2021/11/17/greeces-mistaken-deterrence-migrants-and-aid-workers-facing-heavy-prison-sentences/]

    International experts that took part in the series include Mary Lawlor, the UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of Human Rights Defenders, and Hina Jilani, women rights activist and co-founder of Pakistan’s first all-women law firm.

    The podcast is out now and available to stream on Spotify, Apple, Google and Deezer.

    https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/

    This post was originally published on Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders and their awards.

  • Australia will have mandatory safeguards for high-risk artificial intelligence use like autonomous vehicles and health care but make little to no intervention for low-risk use like filtering spam emails under a new risk-based regulatory approach to be announced by the federal government on Wednesday. The commitment to mandatory regulation follows crackdowns in the EU and Canada…

    The post Law reform for high-risk AI on the way appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Thousands of public servants at dozens of federal departments and agencies will become the first to gain access to Microsoft Copilot as part of a six-month trial of the generative AI assistant. As many as 51 entities have already signed up to the trial, which will run for the next six months across the Australian…

    The post Agencies flock to use Microsoft Copilot in APS trial appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • ChatGPT maker OpenAI this week quietly removed language from its usage policy that prohibited military use of its technology, a move with serious implications given the increase use of artificial intelligence on battlefields including Gaza. ChatGPT is a free tool that lets users enter prompts to receive text or images generated by AI. The Intercept’s Sam Biddle reported Friday that prior to…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • More than half of all federal government agencies using artificial intelligence last year adopted the technology without creating policies to govern its use, raising fresh concerns about the system of governance in place across the Australian Public Service. The finding, contained in an annual audit of government financial statements, comes as a government taskforce continues…

    The post Most federal govt agencies adopting AI without a policy appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Following the decision of a judge in Guatemala City to authorize the immediate release of Virginia Laparra, former prosecutor of the Special Prosecutor’s Office against Impunity (FECI) on Tuesday, 3 January, Ana Piquer, Americas director at Amnesty International, said: 

    Virginia Laparra should never have spent a day in jail. It’s great news that she can be reunited with her loved ones after nearly two years as a prisoner of conscience. Her release is a first step towards ending the terrible human rights violations she has faced in retaliation for her outstanding work as an anti-corruption prosecutor.” 

    “We lament, however, that Virginia Laparra remains convicted of a crime she did not commit and faces another unfounded trial, due to the regrettable use of criminalization against dozens of people who, like her, have led the fight against impunity. Amnesty International reiterates its call for the Guatemalan authorities to put an immediate end to the misuse of the criminal justice system to harass, intimidate and punish judges, prosecutors, human rights defenders and journalists”.

    On 28 November 2022, Amnesty International named the former prosecutor as a prisoner of conscience, having found that her detention was solely due to her human rights work as head of FECI in Quetzaltenango, and requested her immediate and unconditional release. In May 2023, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention declared that the detention of the former anti-corruption prosecutor was arbitrary and requested her immediate release. At the same time, the international mobilization of thousands of human rights activists on the case has not ceased. 

    “Amnesty International underscores the importance of international pressure in cases such as those of Virginia Laparra. Our movement in the Americas and around the world has not rested in demanding the release of the former prosecutor,” said Ana Piquer.

    The unfounded criminal prosecution against Virginia Laparra took place in a context of attacks against dozens of people for their role in the investigation of high-profile cases of large-scale corruption and human rights violations. In 2022, there were 3,754 attacks against human rights defenders and at least 73 judicial workers, journalists and activists had to go into exile, according to data from Guatemala’s Human Rights Defenders Protection Unit (UDEFEGUA).

    see also: https://humanrightsdefenders.blog/2023/05/10/guatemalan-lawyer-claudia-gonzalez-orellana-laureate-lawyers-for-lawyers-award-2023-ceremony-on-line-11-may/

    https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/

    This post was originally published on Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders and their awards.

  • The increasing complexity of naval combat requires speed of assimilation now beyond a ship’s crew. The evolution of naval Combat Management Systems (CMS) and the advancing capabilities of these systems can generally be tracked alongside the processing power of computers. Naval CMS are in essence the central nervous system and brain of a warship taking […]

    The post A Brain for Naval Combat appeared first on Asian Military Review.

    This post was originally published on Asian Military Review.

  • The Republic of Korea Army (RoKA) has deployed a new 8×8 Command Post Vehicle (CPV) for the first time, the Korean Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) said in a press release on 12 December. According to DAPA, the CPV is being used by the RoKA’s 25th Infantry Division in Yangju. It added that the CPV […]

    The post South Korea fields new Command Post Vehicles appeared first on Asian Military Review.

    This post was originally published on Asian Military Review.

  • On 12 December 2023 Amnesty International UK issued a press release about a mass prosecution of human rights activists during COP28 by the UAE. Ahmed Mansoor, subject of an Amnesty UK protest during a Man City game last month, is among those facing new trumped-up terrorism charges. [see: https://www.trueheroesfilms.org/thedigest/laureates/074ACCD4-A327-4A21-B056-440C4C378A1A]

    Responding to news that the Emirati authorities have begun a mass prosecution on trumped-up terrorism charges of more than 80 Emirati human rights activists – including renowned currently-jailed Emirati human rights activists who have already spent a decade behind bars – Aya Majzoub, Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Deputy Director, said:

    “To begin hearings in a new sham mass trial in the midst of what it billed as ‘the most inclusive COP ever’, is a jaw-dropping show of contempt for human rights by the Emirati authorities. The timing appears to be deliberately intended to send a clear message to the world that it will not tolerate the slightest peaceful dissent and that the authorities have no intention of reforming the country’s dire rights record. COP28 has already laid bare the barriers of fear and legalised repression that smother dissent in the UAE.

    The UAE must immediately release all arbitrarily-detained prisoners, drop charges against them and end their ruthless assault on human rights and freedoms.” 

    The new mass trial – first reported by the Emirates Detainees Advocacy Centre and confirmed to Amnesty by exiled Emirati activists – is a joint prosecution of more than 80 defendants, including victims of a past mass trial such as Mohamed al-Siddiq, father of the late exiled Emirati human rights defender Alaa al-Siddiq, prisoners of conscience such as Khalid al-Nuaimi, Hadef al-Owais, Nasser bin Ghaith and Sultan al-Qasimi, and longstanding human rights defenders such as Mohamed al-Roken and Ahmed Mansoor (see below). 

    Fresh charges against Ahmed Mansoor

    Last month, Amnesty UK campaigners flew a protest plane over Manchester City FC’s Etihad Stadium carrying a large banner saying “UAE – Free Ahmed Mansoor”. Mansoor is a blogger, poet and leading Emirati human rights activist who has been in jail and kept in solitary confinement in the UAE since 2017 as a direct result of his campaigning activity. In 2017, Mansoor was convicted on charges which included “insulting the status and prestige of the UAE and its symbols”, “publishing false information to damage the UAE’s reputation abroad” and “portraying the UAE as a lawless land”. The following year, Mansoor was sentenced to ten years’ imprisonment, with the sentencing court also ordering that he be placed under surveillance for three years after release. His conviction and sentence were upheld by the country’s supreme court on 31 December 2018.

    https://www.amnesty.org.uk/press-releases/uae-authorities-launch-mass-prosecution-human-rights-activists-during-cop28

    This post was originally published on Hans Thoolen on Human Rights Defenders and their awards.

  • The federal government will fund artificial intelligence centres across the country to help businesses adopt the technology, reviving a three-year-old plan with a more targeted approach. $17 million in grants for the centres was announced on Friday by Industry minister Ed Husic, who secured the funding in the May Budget as part of a slimmed…

    The post Govt gets moving on $17m plan for AI uptake centres appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.