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Anthony Albanese (Facebook/Anthony Albanese MP)

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese will outline new principles and policies on the use of artificial intelligence in a speech tomorrow titled AI in Australia’s interests, on the technology reshaping many facets of the economy and society. Source: The Age.

Mr Albanese’s decision to deliver a keynote speech in Sydney tomorrow on AI reflects increasing levels of opposition to data centres overseas and fears of worker displacement, particularly as a populist backlash exploits economic anxieties after years of high inflation.

But it is unclear if Mr Albanese’s doctrine will create tangible regulations or focus more on high-level principles, given Australia has minimal influence on global tech regulation.

Trade-offs in the AI policy debate are exposed in a tussle between the Albanese Government and AI giants on whether copyright laws should be waived so companies including Anthropic can train their models in Australia.

Australia has been the second-largest destination for data centre investment after the US, propping up Australia’s mediocre rate of GDP growth.

Tech firms have offered to pay into a fund that would be dispersed to musicians and artists in exchange for a copyright exemption. However, artists have rejected the proposal, and Labor ministers are not inclined to back the idea of a new fund.

UNSW AI Institute chief scientist Toby Walsh said Australia should not “capitulate” on copyright because AI companies were showing around the world that they were willing to pay.

Professor Walsh said he was “pleased to see the government waking up” to the consequences of AI and becoming a “bit more interventionist”.

Although he also told ABC TV that Australia was well behind competitor nations such as South Korea in making investments in AI outside of data centres, on things such as new models and training Australians to use the technology.

Health Minister Mark Butler told Nine’s Today show that Mr Albanese’s speech was about “making sure that everyone gets the benefits, not just a few”.

“Like every wave of technology, it means as a relatively small country at the end of the planet, [so] are we harnessing all of the opportunities with every wave of technology?” Mr Butler said.

“I mean the last big wave of technology, that social media wave, is something where I think we’ve led the world in managing risks and particularly safety risks to young people. So we can do this, but this is a big wave of technology, perhaps bigger than any other we have seen.”

FULL STORY

PM readies major AI announcement, but deadlock remains on billion-dollar tech tussle (By Paul Sakkal, The Age)