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Tech and defence experts push for AI investment boost

Tech and defence experts push for AI investment boost

Artificial intelligence (AI) offers huge opportunities to enhance Australias national security, create new jobs, provide better healthcare and drive efficiencies in key industries, according to a new University of Adelaide report published today.

Artificial intelligence (AI) offers huge opportunities to enhance Australias national security, create new jobs, provide better healthcare and drive efficiencies in key industries, according to a new University of Adelaide report published today.

The Artificial Intelligence: Your Questions Answered has been produced by the University of Adelaide’s Australian Institute for Machine Learning (AIML) in partnership with the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI), with input from defence, technology and political leaders.

Australia must commit to building its sovereign AI research and innovation capability, or risk being left behind as other countries race to pursue their ambitious AI strategies, according to the authors of the report.

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Among the reports 16 authors are: Australia’s Chief Defence Scientist, Professor Tanya Monro; Australian Senator Rex Patrick; chief scientist for South Australia, Professor Caroline McMillen; ASPI director of Defence, Strategy and National Security, Michael Shoebridge; and Science & Technology Australia CEO, Misha Schubert.

AIML director Professor Simon Lucey and Centre for Augmented Reasoning director Professor Anton van den Hengel noted that they wanted to inform public policy leaders about how AI works, and how Australia can best take advantage of the technology by becoming global leaders in ethical AI systems.

“Critical sovereign capabilities in cyber security, defence, homeland security and responding to ‘truth-disruptions to electoral processes and public messaging … are increasingly dependent on AI.

“Theres a global arms race in the development of capabilities in all those areas,” Professor Lucey said.

Professor van den Hengel added that popular myths about AI often seen in Hollywood movies are a distraction from the real risks in how the technologys currently being applied.

“AI has created a new form of power thats unevenly distributed.

“We’ve given away our data to essentially three companies that dont solve human problems … Rather, your data is churned through machine-learning algorithms to recommend to you the next product to buy,” Professor van den Hengel said.

The University of Adelaide’s AIML is the largest university-based machine learning group in Australia, with 166 members, and ranks in the global top five sites for computer vision research capability (AIrankings.org).

[Related: NATO completes full system handover of RQ-4D Phoenix]

 

 

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