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CSIRO tech could stop AI exploiting copyright works

CSIRO tech could stop AI exploiting copyright works

Tech companies' practice of using creative works to train AI, without paying the copyright holders, is infuriating writers and other creators.
But Australia's national science agency, the CSIRO, may have come up with a solution to the problem.
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New $90 million research facility opens at CSIRO to house specimens collected over 150 years
New $90 million research facility opens at CSIRO to house specimens collected over 150 years

ABC News

time19 minutes ago

  • ABC News

New $90 million research facility opens at CSIRO to house specimens collected over 150 years

Millions of irreplaceable biodiversity specimens have been re-homed at a new CSIRO facility that the agency says will support research to better understand and manage Australia's natural environment. Named 'Diversity', the $90 million National Research Collections building in Canberra features temperature-controlled vaults that are bushfire and pest-resistant while designed to preserve 13 million specimens for future generations. Among the specimens, which have been collected over 150 years, are 55,000 birds, 17,000 orchids, 2.4 million moths and seven million beetles. Dr Clare Holleley, who is the director of vertebrate collections, says the facility serves as a "time machine for Australia's biodiversity". "It's taken snapshots of specimens over time, and when we put all of those little snapshots together, it puts together a picture of how Australia's biodiversity is changing. "We can learn from those trends and potentially predict what is going to happen in the future." The collections include 99 per cent of Australia's native birds, as well as exotic bird species, skeletons, mammals, reptiles stored in ethanol, eggs and frozen tissue. Relocating the specimens took about a year. The official opening of the facility coincides with National Science Week, described by CSIRO chief executive Doug Hilton as an "exciting" moment. Dr Hilton described the facility as "cutting-edge", featuring new genomics laboratories and digitisation facilities that will allow scientists to extract and share more information from research specimens. "If we can't understand how things are changing over time, it's very hard to conserve things for the future," he said. "What we have here is a facility that holds specimens in a highly secure way and allows us to digitise and automate digitisation in a way that is just the envy of the world." While there was celebration at the opening of the building, concern remains about the potential of job cuts at the agency, with the Community and Public Sector Union warning that hundreds of jobs could be axed this year. In responding to those concerns, Dr Hilton said: "Our science has to adapt". "There are programs of research that we may have to stop in order for us to be able to do new programs of research to tackle those big problems like productivity, sustainability and our sovereign science capacity." He said the agency would be reviewing its whole portfolio of science next month and then would need to make "hard choices", but wouldn't say how many jobs could be affected. The new National Research Collections building was jointly funded by the CSIRO and the Department of Education through the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy. While the building won't be open to the public, the collections will be accessible to researchers, governments, and citizen scientists worldwide.

What can we learn from New Zealand's experience with potato mop-top virus?
What can we learn from New Zealand's experience with potato mop-top virus?

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

What can we learn from New Zealand's experience with potato mop-top virus?

For the first time, potato mop-top virus has been detected in Australia. Spread by a soil-borne fungus vector that can cling to machinery and other materials, it's so far unclear how the disease made it onto a farm in north-west Tasmania. An incident management team has been created to trace and contain the virus, amid concerns for the state's $300 million potato industry. Seven years ago, one of Australia's closest neighbours was dealing with a detection of the same virus. So what can Tasmania learn from the experience across the ditch? Potato mop-top virus was first recorded in a single potato tuber taken from the storage facility of a processing factory in Canterbury, New Zealand in September 2018. Before then, the disease had never been seen in New Zealand. In Tasmania, the virus has only been detected on one farm and risk mitigation measures have been put in place to try and contain it. But in New Zealand, it wasn't clear exactly which paddock the diseased tuber had come from, so a range of sites were tested and it soon became clear the virus was in several paddocks in Canterbury. Iain Kirkwood, an agronomist and biosecurity manager from industry group Potatoes New Zealand, said an international committee of experts was set up to look at response options in New Zealand. "They very quickly came to the conclusion that we cannot eradicate it, because it's a soil-borne organism which causes a powdery scab, and that can stay in the soil for years and years," Dr Kirkwood said. According to the advisory group, eradication had not been achieved in many other international regions where the virus had been recorded either. The New Zealand response moved from "eradication" to "management". Dr Kirkwood said an entire department of the Ministry for Primary Industries looks at tracking and tracing how various incursions get into the country, but, despite a lot of time and money, it couldn't determine how potato mop-top virus arrived in New Zealand. Potato mop-top virus is also found in the United States. Professor Alexander Karasev from the University of Idaho said it might be difficult to trace how the virus entered Tasmania. "In the US, we suspect that the main route of transmission of the virus is with soil … that might be potted for ornamental [plants] which may not even be related to potatoes," Professor Karasev said. Potato mop-top virus can cause significant yield and quality reductions in potatoes. Dr Kirkwood said there hadn't been any reports of yield impacts in New Zealand. He said the virus was discovered in one seed paddock, and that seed line had to be destroyed and the grower compensated. But he said overall, there hadn't been a major impact on New Zealand's potato industry so far. "We're monitoring it through the processors — they report to us if they see mop-top in their lines — and they're recording it every so often," Dr Kirkwood said. "But it's not causing any significant economic impact either on the growers or the processors right now." The international expert advisory group did give New Zealand a warning, though. "We're hopefully monitoring it sufficiently and that it's not going to creep up upon and cause some major issues, but it's one that you do have to pay attention to." Dr Kirkwood said the most important thing New Zealand did was an early survey, testing about 200 lines of potatoes, including seed potatoes, throughout the whole country, to get a good picture of where and how widespread the virus was. "It's very difficult to carry out a response if you're not certain as to where the disease actually is, so I would encourage Tasmania to do some form of survey," he said. Dr Kirkwood also said it would be important for Biosecurity Tasmania to work with the local industry. "The local industry knows the industry better than anyone else — far better than Biosecurity Tasmania does — so I would encourage them to work closely with the growers and the grower organisations."

Hollywood director James Cameron warns of ‘Terminator-style apocalypse'
Hollywood director James Cameron warns of ‘Terminator-style apocalypse'

News.com.au

time2 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Hollywood director James Cameron warns of ‘Terminator-style apocalypse'

Hollywood director James Cameron has warned the misuse of artificial intelligence could lead to the kind of dystopia represented in his 1984 film, Terminator. In an interview with Rolling Stone, the 70-year-old filmmaker warned that humanity could face extinction if it was used with inappropriate intent. 'I do think there's still a danger of a Terminator-style apocalypse where you put AI together with weapons systems, even up to the level of nuclear weapon systems, nuclear defence counter-strike, all that stuff,' Cameron said. 'I feel like we're at this cusp in human development where you've got the three existential threats: climate and our overall degradation of the natural world, nuclear weapons, and super-intelligence.' 'The theatre of operations is so rapid, the decision windows are so fast, it would take a super-intelligence to be able to process it, and maybe we'll be smart and keep a human in the loop. 'But humans are fallible, and there have been a lot of mistakes made that have put us right on the brink of international incidents that could have led to nuclear war. So I don't know.' Uncertainty has been a recurring theme in ongoing conversations about the role the technology will play in the future, though experts are certain of one thing: it's only a matter of time until AI is integrated into nuclear weapons. Last month, at a talk at the University of Chicago for Nobel laureates, Stanford University Professor Scott Sagan said that we were entering a new world of AI that was not only influencing our daily lives, but also 'influencing the nuclear world we live in', as reported by Wired. Similarly, Bob Latiff, a member of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists' Science and Security Board, said he believed AI will be as commonplace as electricity. 'It's going to find its way into everything,' he said. Where making decisions about nuclear weapons is concerned, experts maintained that ensuring human control remains front of mind is key. Director of Global Risk at the Federation of American Scientists, Jon Wolfstal, also pointed out one major flaw with integrating artificial intelligence into nuclear weapons: nobody really understands what AI is. 'A number of people have said, 'Well, look, all I want to do is have an interactive computer available for the President so he can figure out what (Vladimir) Putin or Xi (Jinping) will do and I can produce that data set very reliably,' he said, referring to large language models. 'I can get everything that Xi or Putin has ever said and written about anything and have a statistically high probability to reflect what Putin has said. 'I was like, 'That's great. How do you know Putin believes what he's said or written?' 'It's not that the probability is wrong, it's just based on an assumption that can't be tested.'

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