Australia politics live: Dennis Richardson says he was ‘way overpaid’ for work on royal commission into antisemitism | Australia news

Australia politics live: Dennis Richardson says he was ‘way overpaid’ for work on royal commission into antisemitism | Australia news


www.theguardian.com

Richardson says he felt he was ‘surplus’ to needs of royal commission

Dennis Richardson says his decision to resign from the royal commission into antisemitism had nothing to do with the government, but says he came to the decision that he was “surplus” to the needs of the body.

He spoke to RN Breakfast this morning, saying:

double quotation markI think probably there wasn’t enough discussion right at the beginning about the precise way things would work, and ultimately I came to the [decision] that I was surplus to requirements.

Richardson says he believes the royal commission will do a “highly professional job”.

Dennis Richardson. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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Josh Taylor

Josh Taylor

Anthropic promises to match US commitments on power, water use

After Anthropic said this week it was establishing a Sydney office, and was looking towards local infrastructure in Australia, independent senator David Pocock asked Anthropic’s head of safeguards, Evan Frondorf, about Guardian reporting on expected AI water demand in Australia to be projected to be the equivalent of the ACT’s drinking water supply.

He asked Frondorf what Anthropic was doing to make sure there wasn’t a spike in emissions, water use and electricity costs with its data centres.

Frondorf said in the US, Anthropic has committed to cover the full costs of grid upgrades, and bring net new power generation to meet its demand, reduce the draw of power at peak times and deploy water efficient cooling. He said the company would expect to adopt a similar approach in other markets.

Senator David Pocock. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

At the end of the hearing, One Nation senator Malcolm Roberts, said One Nation had “phenomenal growth, staggering growth, and we get so many compliments for our work” and complained the ABC “which is notorious for propaganda” was saying the party’s popularity was due to “Vietnamese bots”.

He was referring to an ABC report that examined a trove of foreign-owned Facebook accounts that were promoting One Nation using deepfake AI images.

“Is AI often blame for things that are quite natural and truthful?” Roberts asked.

Frondorf:

double quotation markI’m not familiar with this particular situation and so can’t speak to that. But I would say we take seriously our responsibility to make the the benefits of AI and maximise the benefits of AI for the world.



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