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Man claims ‘discrimination' after request for Greek Orthodox funeral for deceased 93yo father denied
Man claims ‘discrimination' after request for Greek Orthodox funeral for deceased 93yo father denied

News.com.au

time3 days ago

  • General
  • News.com.au

Man claims ‘discrimination' after request for Greek Orthodox funeral for deceased 93yo father denied

A man who claimed he was subject to religious discrimination by the Queensland Government after they refused to pay for his deceased father's Greek Orthodox funeral says he was denied 'natural justice' when his case was thrown out. Angelos Angelopoulos' attempt to take the government to the state's civil tribunal was refused in 2022 after he complained he was subject to discrimination when told a grant of funding for a burial service for his father, Anastasios, would not cover the costs of a Greek Orthodox service required to help farewell the 93-year-old. After appealing the decision from the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal (QCAT), Mr Angelopoulos this week suffered an additional blow in court when this fresh attempt was dismissed by the Court of Appeal in Brisbane. Anastasios died in hospital on June 23, 2018. His son sought financial assistance from the Palaszczuk-led Labor government under Queensland's Burials Assistance Act (BAA) as he could not afford to pay for the funeral service and burial at the time of Anastasios' passing. But the aid only covered the reopening of a pre-purchased burial plot, a graveside service, the funeral director's fee, a coffin and 'any required preparation of the body and transportation from the morgue to the burial site'. Angelos desired for his father to hold a Greek Orthodox funeral according to Anastasios' strong beliefs, but further financial assistance for this was refused. The Greek community and the Greek Orthodox Church stepped in to fund a church service, but it did not extend to the costs of the private viewing of Anastasios in an open coffin. It was not for another 20 weeks Mr Angelopoulos' father was buried in November 2018. In his submissions to the tribunal, he argued he was discriminated against over the requirement to bury his father 'without his complying with his father's and his own religious beliefs'. 'According to Mr Angelopoulos, a higher proportion of people who are not of Greek Orthodox faith would be able to comply with the term and bury family members without a church service or private viewing,' the Court of Appeal judgment states. The tribunal dismissed Mr Angelopoulos' application in 2022. In her decision, QCAT member Joanne Browne said Mr Angelopoulos was not treated 'less favourably' than any other person because of the decision to grant him funding under the BAA. 'The respondent's conduct is in all of the circumstances reasonable … on the basis that the conduct was necessary to comply with or is specifically authorised by the BAA,' she wrote. Ms Browne noted Mr Angelopoulos was not denied the additional costs associated with a funeral because of his religious beliefs. Under the Act, the government could only make arrangements for the disposal of a body, such as helping with a burial or cremation, and funerals were not covered under the funding arrangement. The Department of Justice and Attorney-General (DJAG) also wrote to Mr Angelopoulos informing him the Orthodox service was not part of the scope of their funding arrangement. 'Queensland is a multicultural state with diverse range of cultures and religions. Should DJAG agree to provide a church service and viewing in the current circumstances, then it would be obliged to provide a similar offer to all applicants of all cultures and religion,' the department said, according to the QCAT judgment. 'The cost to the state would be very significant and this would be a huge impost on limited government funds to provide specialised funeral services, as opposed to a simple burial, for each and every culture and religion in circumstances where burial assistance is approved.' A subsequent attempt to appeal the decision through QCAT's own appeals tribunal was also dismissed. Mr Angelopoulos then took the matter to Queensland's Court of Appeal, arguing five grounds. Some of his submissions included that he was denied natural justice due to limited evidence, the tribunal overlooked the Human Rights Act and that there was an error of fact in the respondent's argument. The Court of Appeal judgment states there was 'no jurisdiction' for at least three of the grounds of appeal. 'Leave should not be granted to the applicant given the proposed appeal does not raise questions of law arising from the final decision … in relation to grounds 1-3 and 5,' the judgment states.

Chatbot Arena secures $100m to enhance AI platform
Chatbot Arena secures $100m to enhance AI platform

Yahoo

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Chatbot Arena secures $100m to enhance AI platform

Chatbot Arena, a platform designed to compare the performance of various AI models, has raised $100m in seed funding. The round was led by Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) and UC Investments (University of California), with participation from Lightspeed, Laude Ventures, Felicis, Kleiner Perkins, and The House Fund. The round values the company at $600m, according to a Bloomberg report. The funding coincides with the upcoming relaunch of LMArena, featuring a fully rebuilt platform designed to enhance AI evaluation with greater rigor, transparency, and user focus. The platform, which originated as an academic project at UC Berkeley, enables researchers, developers, and users to assess how AI models perform in real-world scenarios. More than 400 model evaluations have been conducted on LMArena, with more than three million votes cast, influencing both proprietary and open-source models from companies such as Google, OpenAI, Meta, and xAI, the company said. LMArena co-founder and CEO Anastasios Angelopoulos said: "In a world racing to build ever-bigger models, the hard question is no longer what can AI do. Rather, it's how well can it do it for specific use cases, and for whom. We're building the infrastructure to answer these critical questions." The relaunched LMArena, set to debut in late May 2025, incorporates community feedback and introduces a rebuilt user interface, mobile-first design, lower latency, and new features like saved chat history and endless chat. Ion Stoica, co-founder and UC Berkeley professor, said: 'AI evaluation has often lagged behind model development. LMArena closes that gap by putting rigorous, community-driven science at the centre. It's refreshing to be part of a team that leads with long-term integrity in a space moving this fast.' The company collaborates with model providers to identify performance trends, gather human preference data, and test updates in real-world conditions, aiming to develop advanced analytics and enterprise services while keeping core participation free. 'We invested in LMArena because the future of AI depends on reliability,' said Anjney Midha, general partner at a16z. 'And reliability requires transparent, scientific, community-led evaluation. LMArena is building that backbone.' Jagdeep Singh Bachher, chief investment officer at UC Investments, said: 'We're excited to see open AI research translated into real-world impact through platforms like LMArena. Supporting innovation from university labs such as those at UC Berkeley is essential for building technologies that responsibly serve the public and advance the field.' "Chatbot Arena secures $100m to enhance AI platform" was originally created and published by Verdict, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site.

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