A public, Australian AI
If artificial intelligence (AI) is going to be as consequential and transformative as is being predicted, then we need to build AI infrastructure that is made in Australia, with a public good/not-for-profit imperative.
For over a decade, Australia has been content to allow private, foreign owned digital platforms to slowly infiltrate our public services, community forums and democratic processes. This has included critical areas such as news dissemination, information sharing during disasters, community consultations, public service provision and even public trials.
Slowly, we transitioned our public communications infrastructure from publicly-managed platforms to privately owned digital products and social media. Social media and digital platforms have created an atmosphere of distrust, with most Australians believing social media 'causes more problems than it solves'.
The author of this paper suggests that this is particularly concerning when we consider that AI will need to account for specifically local concerns and outputs – requiring local data sets, and local quality checkers. AI is meant to be reflective and representative of a particular region’s culture and information, enough so that its recommendations are understood and tailored to that region’s context.
