Category: AI

  • By Jason Ma

    See original post here.

    • LinkedIn’s chief economic opportunity officer, Aneesh Raman, said artificial intelligence is increasingly threatening the types of jobs that historically have served as stepping stones for young workers who are just beginning their careers. He likened the disruption to the decline of manufacturing in the 1980s.

    As millions of students get ready to graduate this spring, their prospects for landing that first job that helps launch their careers is looking dimmer

    In addition to an economy that’s slowing amid tariff-induced uncertainty, artificial intelligence is threatening entry-level work that traditionally has served as stepping stones, according to LinkedIn’s chief economic opportunity officer, Aneesh Raman, who likened the shift to the decline of manufacturing in the 1980s.

    “Now it is our office workers who are staring down the same kind of technological and economic disruption,” he wrote in a recent New York Times op-ed. “Breaking first is the bottom rung of the career ladder.”

    For example, AI tools are doing the types of simple coding and debugging tasks that junior software developers did to gain experience. AI is also doing work that young employees in the legal and retail sectors once did. And Wall Street firms are reportedly considering steep cuts to entry-level hiring.

    Meanwhile, the unemployment rate for college graduates has been rising faster than for other workers in past few years, Raman pointed out, though there isn’t definitive evidence yet that AI is the cause of the weak job market.

    To be sure, businesses aren’t doing away with entry-level work altogether, as executives still seek fresh ideas from young workers, he added. AI has also freed up some junior employees to take on more advanced work earlier in their careers.

    But changes rippling through certain sectors today are likely heading for others in the future, with office jobs due to feel the biggest impact, Raman predicted.

    “While the technology sector is feeling the first waves of change, reflecting A.I.’s mass adoption in this field, the erosion of traditional entry-level tasks is expected to play out in fields like finance, travel, food and professional services, too,” he said.

    To fix entry-level work, Raman called for colleges to incorporate AI across their curricula and for companies to give junior roles higher-level tasks.

    There are some signs that companies are adapting to the new AI landscape. Jasper.ai CEO Timothy Young told Fortune’s Diane Brady recently that “the commoditization of intelligence” means hiring the smartest people is less important than developing staff to have management skills.

    “There is a lot of power in the junior employees, but you can’t leverage them the same way that you would in the past,” he said, noting that he looks for curiosity and resilience when hiring.

    Indeed CEO Chris Hyams said at Fortune’s Workplace Innovation Summit in Dana Point, Calif. on Monday that AI can’t completely replace a job.

    But Indeed’s findings show that “for about two-thirds of all jobs, 50% or more of those skills are things that today’s generative AI can do reasonably well, or very well.”

    Still, language-learning app Duolingo and fintech app Klarna have recently walked back aggressive stances on replacing humans with AI.

    Some studies have also shown AI isn’t panning out as much as hoped, so far. An IBM survey found that 3 in 4 AI initiatives fail to deliver their promised ROI. And a National Bureau of Economic Research study of workers in AI-exposed industries found that the technology had next to no impact on earnings or hours worked.

    “It seems it’s a much smaller and much slower transition than you might imagine if you had just studied the technology’s potential in a vacuum,” University of Chicago economics professor Anders Humlum, one of the NBER study authors, previously told Fortune.

    This post was originally published on Basic Income Today.

  • A series of “proof of value” AI trials will be conducted across the South Australian public sector as part of a new government program funded in the state Budget on Thursday. The trials, which will cost $28 million over the next four years, will target “high priority areas” like healthcare, where AI could automate administrative…

    The post SA funds ‘proof of value’ AI trials, sets up new VC fund appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Artificial intelligence is being deployed across NSW universities without central oversight, policies or strategies, leaving several institutions without a “complete understanding” of their use, a new audit has revealed. Only six of the state’s 10 public universities are identifying and documenting all the AI tools they implement. But even then, many still lacked complete details…

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  • Infosys’ global tech chief Rafee Tarafdar says companies will soon face a “third wave” of AI adoption, where they will need to balance the innovation gains of the technology against controls to prevent it becoming the next shadow IT nightmare. But he said “having a dedicated, responsible AI office” holds the answer and would help…

    The post Driving responsible AI takes a dedicated office: Infosys CTO appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

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  • 👋 New to Activism? You’re in the Right Place. 

    You don’t need experience to make a difference. You just need the belief that things can be better – and the courage to take that first step. At Amnesty, we’ll support you to get involved in a way that works for you. Whether you’ve got five minutes or a few hours a month, there’s a place for you in our movement. 

    ….

    🌈 Ready to Take Action? Sign up Today. 

    Once you sign up, we’ll guide you through a short online induction module that introduces you to who we are, what we do, and how you can help. From there, you’ll be connected with the right support to help you  

    https://www.amnesty.org.au/skill-up-2/

  • UK public servants saved an average of 26 minutes each day using Microsoft’s generative AI tool during a large-scale trial last year – less than half the time Australians did during a similar Copilot trial. The trial, which took place in the last three months of 2024, involved 20,000 public servants across 12 departments and…

    The post Copilot saved UK public servants less time than in Australia appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Former Industry Minister Ed Husic on Tuesday blamed Treasury “hard heads” for limiting Australia’s technology development, and revealed he wants artificial intelligence governed by an AI Act to instill public confidence. But Mr Husic, who led a two year consultation on Australia’s AI regulation that is yet to deliver anything enforceable, said the Albanese government…

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  • Industry minister Tim Ayres has given the clearest picture yet of the federal government’s AI policy reset, arguing Australia must “lean in” and secure a stake in the technology if it is to have any chance shaping its digital future. In his first major comments on artificial intelligence since becoming minister last month, Mr Ayres…

    The post Australia must lean into AI opportunity or miss out: Tim Ayres appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

  • As governments around the world equivocate about holding powerful and self-interested AI providers accountable, it may fall to ordinary citizens to defend our own rights. To do this, we need to be creative, retrofitting old news to new harms. Only a few months ago, the prospects of meaningful, enforceable regulation of AI in Australia looked…

    The post Using existing legal frameworks to ensure AI accountability appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

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  • For defense and intelligence agencies operating in today’s high-speed global environment, timely geospatial intelligence is mission critical. Yet legacy systems are too slow. Delayed intel hurts everyone — defense ministries securing borders, civilian teams responding to disasters or agencies operating at scale. Outdated solutions make intelligence hard to request, unreliable in delivery and ultimately impossible […]

    The post At your command: On-Demand intelligence from BlackSky appeared first on Asian Military Review.

    This post was originally published on Asian Military Review.

  • Australia’s peak business lobby has called on government to accelerate national efforts to bake productivity-enhancing artificial intelligence systems into the economy. The Business Council of Australia has released a landmark report offering 16 recommendations that it says can turn the nation into “a global leader” in just three years. The phased plan, contained in its…

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  • Pointing out right-wing hypocrisy does little to alleviate its toll. Still, one provision tucked into Republicans’ sweeping tax and spending bill is particularly glaring in its ideological inconsistency: a 10-year ban on state AI regulation. Yes, that means that the party most wont to cry federal overreach is now seeking to directly intervene in state policymaking. Of course…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Australian startup Heatseeker AI has raised US$1.5 million (A$2.3 million) in pre-seed funding from US investors at a “pivotal moment” in the multi-billion dollar market research industry. The oversubscribed round, led by San Francisco-based Capital F, attracted investment from Eupehmia, Even Capital and East End Ventures for the company’s behavioral research platform. The platform allows…

    The post Aussie AI statrtup raises US$1.5m pre-seed funding appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

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  • Nvidia beat quarterly sales expectations as customers stockpiled its AI chips before fresh US curbs on China exports took effect, but the same restrictions will slice off US$8 billion in sales from the company’s current quarter, forcing it to offer a forecast below Wall Street estimates. Shares of the world’s most valuable semiconductor firm still…

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  • One of Australia’s first voice AI startups has been acquired and had its technology and assets stripped after collapsing into administration earlier this year, in a blow to the country’s AI ambitions. Sydney-based Curious Thing called in the administrators in late March, hiring Henry McKenna of accounting firm Vincents to oversee the process, before proceeding…

    The post Sydney voice AI startup finds buyer after collapse appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

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  • Australia stands at a pivotal moment in shaping its digital future. As global competition in AI accelerates, Australia must act decisively to secure its digital sovereignty. Investing in sovereign AI capability – developed, deployed, and governed domestically – is essential to ensure ethical alignment, operational control, and resilience across key sectors such as defence, national…

    The post Owning the algorithm: Australia’s path to AI sovereignty appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Services Australia has unveiled its first automation and artificial intelligence strategy, which it says will give it a two-year ethical footing and pathway to trust in the technologies. The new document makes high level commitments to human-centred design and deployment at the wide-reaching service agency, and says its AI use will be explainable and subject…

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  • Reacting to the news that the Russian authorities have declared Amnesty International an “undesirable organization” thereby criminalizing its activities and any association with the organization in Russia, Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General, said19 May 2025 

    This decision is part of the Russian government’s broader effort to silence dissent and isolate civil society. In a country where scores of activists and dissidents have been imprisoned, killed or exiled, where independent media has been smeared, blocked or forced to self-censor, and where civil society organizations have been outlawed or liquidated, you must be doing something right if the Kremlin bans you.  

    “The authorities are deeply mistaken if they believe that by labelling our organization “undesirable” we will stop our work documenting and exposing human rights violations – quite the opposite. We will not give in to the threats and will continue undeterred to work to ensure that people in Russia are able to enjoy their human rights without discrimination. We will keep documenting and speaking worldwide about the war crimes committed in Ukraine by Russia. We will redouble our efforts to expose Russia’s egregious human rights violations both at home and abroad.  

    The authorities are deeply mistaken if they believe that by labelling our organization “undesirable” we will stop our work documenting and exposing human rights violations – quite the oppositeAgnès Callamard, Amnesty International’s Secretary General

    “We will never stop fighting for the release of prisoners of conscience detained for standing up for human rights or for the repeal of repressive laws that prevent people in Russia from speaking up against injustice. We will continue to work relentlessly to ensure that all those who are responsible for committing grave human rights violations, whether in Russia, Ukraine, or elsewhere, face justice. Put simply, no authoritarian assault will silence our fight for justice. Amnesty will never give up or back down in its fight for upholding human rights in Russia and beyond.” 

    Background 

    On 19 May 2025, the Russian Prosecutor General’s Office declared Amnesty International an “undesirable organization” under repressive 2015 Russian legislation which allows the authorities to ban arbitrarily any foreign organization and criminalize its activities in Russia. The announcement accused Amnesty International of promoting “Russophobic projects” and indicated that it was prompted by the organization’s work on freedom of expression and association in Russia, and its documentation and exposition of crimes under international law committed by Russian forces in Ukraine. The decision is based on a Russian law which in itself violates international law, and the language of the decision goes against facts accusing Amnesty International of activities which, within its statutory documents and policies, it is prevented from undertaking.

    The designation comes three years after the Russian authorities blocked access to Amnesty International’s websites in Russia and de-registered – effectively closed down – the organization’s office in Moscow. The designation puts at risk of prosecution in Russia partner organizations and individual supporters, journalists, other persons who now work with, or are seen by the authorities as supporting or promoting, the organization.

    Under Russian legislation, participation in the activities of an “undesirable organization” is punishable by law. First-time “offenses” may result in administrative fines of up to 15,000 rubles (around US$185). Repeated violations as well as funding or managing such organizations carry criminal liability and can lead to prison sentences of up to six years. The law has previously been applied to the distribution or reposting of any materials from the designated organization, including publications and hyperlinks predating its designation as “undesirable”.

    This designation places Amnesty International among dozens of independent NGOs and media outlets that have been targeted in recent years as part of a sweeping campaign to suppress dissent and dismantle civil society in Russia and prevent international watchdogs and partners from providing support or showing solidarity with them. These moves are the backbone of a pattern whereby the Russian authorities are using authoritarian practices to silence voices, undermine accountability and entrench power. [see also: https://humanrightsdefenders.blog/2019/01/22/in-russia-first-criminal-case-under-undesirable-organizations-law/]

    https://www.fidh.org/en/issues/human-rights-defenders/russian-federation-designation-of-amnesty-international-as

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

  • Services Australia ramped up its testing of automation and artificial intelligence last year in preparation for wider deployments aimed at cutting costs and improving services in 2025, despite incomplete assurance processes and legislative barriers. The acceleration includes internal testing on virtual assistants, machine learning cybersecurity tools, automatically scanning staff medical certificates and using AI to…

    The post Expert advisers question AI testing at Services Aus appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

    This post was originally published on InnovationAus.com.

  • Atlassian co-founder and chief executive Mike Cannon-Brookes has warned that regulating artificial intelligence (AI) “at such an early stage…seems crazy” and for governments to focus instead on the downstream upside of the technology. In conversation with the Australian British Chamber of Commerce chief executive officer Ticky Fullerton at a special briefing at Sydney’s Tech Central…

    The post “Crazy” to regulate AI, Mike Cannon-Brookes warns appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

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  • Thales has been awarded by Singapore defence prime ST Engineering to supply its Pathmaster system to boost the Republic of Singapore Navy’s (RSN) mine countermeasures (MCM) capabilities, the company announced on 19 May. The contract is also the first for the Pathmaster system in Asia, the company added. According to Thales, the contract was awarded […]

    The post Thales contracted for Singapore MCM USV programme appeared first on Asian Military Review.

    This post was originally published on Asian Military Review.

  • HAVELSAN, Türkiye’s leading software and systems company under the Turkish Armed Forces Foundation, has signed a strategic partnership agreement with Malaysia’s prominent technology group Dagang NeXchange Berhad (DNeX). Formalized during the Langkawi International Maritime and Aerospace Exhibition (LIMA) 2025, the agreement marks a milestone in building a digital bridge between Türkiye and Malaysia in both […]

    The post HAVELSAN Takes a Strategic Leap: Partners with DNeX to Accelerate Digital Transformation Across Türkiye and Malaysia appeared first on Asian Military Review.

    This post was originally published on Asian Military Review.

  • Victoria looks set to ramp up its use of artificial intelligence in regulatory decisions, with the state government revealing plans to use the technology to replace “outdated processes” as part of an $11 million program of work. The program comes as the government foreshadows greater use of automation to help “right-size expenditure” and bring its…

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  • A South Australian artificial intelligence strategy is under development to boost investment and adoption of the technology in what is arguably already an Australian stronghold. A nation-first AI Capability Directory is also in the works to connect South Australia’s expertise among government, industry and leading research institutions, and to promote it to the rest of…

    The post SA govt gets to work on AI strategy appeared first on InnovationAus.com.

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  • AI will do the thinking, robots will do the doing. What place do humans have in this arrangement – and do tech CEOs care?

    By: Ed Newton-Rex

    See original post here.

    I recently found myself at a dinner in an upstairs room at a restaurant in San Francisco hosted by a venture capital firm. The after-dinner speaker was a tech veteran who, having sold his AI company for hundreds of millions of dollars, has now turned his hand to investing. He had a simple message for the assembled startup founders: the money you can make in AI isn’t limited to the paltry market sizes of previous technology waves. You can replace the world’s workers – which means you can capture their salaries. All of them.

    Replacing all human labour with AI sounds like the stuff of science fiction. But it is the explicit aim of a growing number of the tech elite – and these are people who lack neither drive nor resources, who have deep pockets and even deeper determination. If they say they want to automate all labour, we should take them at their word.

    This is generally an aim that’s only admitted to behind closed doors, for obvious reasons. There’s little that will summon the pitchforks quicker than telling people you’re trying to take away their jobs. But a company called Mechanize last month bucked the trend and said the quiet part out loud. Their vision is “the full automation of the economy”, a vision they’ve convinced some of the biggest names in Silicon Valley to fund, including Google’s chief scientist, Jeff Dean, and popular podcaster Dwarkesh Patel.

    Is automating all jobs really feasible? Elon Musk certainly thinks so. The rise of AI and robotics will mean “probably none of us will have a job”, he said last year. Bill Gates thinks humans soon won’t be needed for “most things”. Massive labour replacement has also been predicted by godfather of AI Geoffrey Hinton and billionaire investor Vinod Khosla. These are hardly fringe voices that have no idea what they’re talking about.

    Some careers are obviously safe from robot takeover. Taylor Swift is not in danger. Nor is Harry Kane. Nor, for that matter, is Keir Starmer, or the as-yet-unnamed next archbishop of Canterbury. Famous artist, sportsperson, politician, priest – perhaps the four jobs that are the most resistant to automation. Unfortunately they’re not open to all of us.

    Today’s technology cannot replace all human labour. AI makes mistakes. Robots lack coordination, dexterity, versatility. So that’s something. But there is lots that cutting-edge technology can already do. And there are good reasons to think it will continue to improve – fast.

    GPT-4, one of OpenAI’s large language models, was already scoring in the top 10% on the bar exam back in 2023. Their more recent models are better at coding than their own chief scientist. Freelance writing jobs plummeted when ChatGPT was released; the same happened to graphic design jobs with the arrival of AI image generators. Driverless cars are everywhere in San Francisco. As Sam Altman himself said: “Jobs are definitely going to go away, full stop.”

    While AI grabs most of the headlines, robots are advancing rapidly too. And where AI threatens white-collar jobs, robots target physical labour. One type of humanoid robot is already being tested in BMW factories; another managed to master more than 100 tasks that would usually be done by human store workers. Companies plan to start testing robots in the home this year. The Silicon Valley vision for the labour market is remarkably simple: AI does the thinking, robots do the doing. What place do humans have in this arrangement?

    Up until very recently, AI researchers thought that artificial general intelligence (AGI) – that is, AI that can perform essentially all cognitive tasks at human level – was a long way off. Not any more. Demis Hassabis, the head of Google DeepMind, now thinks “it’s coming very soon” – less than five to 10 years wouldn’t surprise him.

    Of course these predictions may be wrong. Perhaps we’re headed for another AI winter; perhaps the chatbots will stop improving, the robots will keep falling over, the funding will move on to the next big thing in tech. I don’t think so, but it’s possible. But that’s not the point. The question here isn’t whether the legions of tech CEOs and billions of dollars of funding being poured into near-total labour automation will achieve what they’re trying to achieve. The question is why they’re trying to achieve it at all, and how the rest of us feel about it.

    The generous answer is that they genuinely believe a post-labour economy will mean huge economic growth and vastly improved global living standards. The obvious question is what, historically speaking, suggests that the benefits of this growth would be distributed evenly.

    The less generous answer is that it’s about what it’s always about: money. Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen once famously said: “Software is eating the world.” Up until now there’s only been so much it could eat. Whatever software you built, you still needed people to do most of the world’s work, with the labour market itself tantalisingly out of reach for ambitious tech execs. But now Silicon Valley sees an opening. A chance to own the entire means of production. And it wouldn’t be Silicon Valley if it didn’t try to seize that chance.

    This post was originally published on Basic Income Today.

  • Demand Progress on Monday led over 140 organizations “committed to protecting civil rights, promoting consumer protections, and fostering responsible innovation” in a letter opposing U.S. House Republicans’ inclusion of legislation that would ban state and local laws regulating artificial intelligence in a megabill advanced by the Budget Committee late Sunday. Section 43201(c) — added by U.S.

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • Australia’s regulatory settings for artificial intelligence will go under the microscope for the second time in two years as part of a series of inquiries aimed at turning around the country’s sluggish productivity. As the government re-sets its sights on the benefits of the technology, the Productivity Commission on Monday flagged AI as one of…

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  • Singapore’s Defence Science and Technology Agency (DSTA) has signed separate agreements with European defence primes to develop enhanced capabilities for the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF). In early May, DSTA announced that it has inked a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to jointly explore digitalisation and experimentation opportunities in simulation and training systems to enhance training capabilities […]

    The post Singapore signs more MoUs with European defence primes appeared first on Asian Military Review.

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  • In Mexico, the tech oligarchy is thriving. Amazon is increasing its spending and plans to lavish $6 billion in U.S. currency in Mexico during this year and next. Meanwhile, the multinational technology company Nvidia is manufacturing AI servers (exempted from tariffs) at factories in Mexico. Roughly 60 percent of the U.S.’s AI servers are made in Mexico, and Foxconn and Nvidia have…

    Source

    This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.

  • A number of US technology firms including chip makers announced artificial intelligence deals in the Middle East as President Donald Trump secured $600 billion in commitments from Saudi Arabia to US companies during a tour of Gulf states. Among the biggest deals, Nvidia said it will sell hundreds of thousands of AI chips in Saudi…

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