Australia’s federal government scrapped a long-planned AI advisory board after spending 15 months and about $188,000 narrowing 270 applicants to 12 nominees, pivoting instead to an in-house AI safety institute. The move marks a shift away from earlier “mandatory guardrails” that likely would have required new legislation, toward leveraging existing regulators and drawing expertise as needed. Officials say the new institute, funded at $29.9 million, will test and monitor AI systems and flag regulatory gaps, aiming for a more agile response as the technology evolves. Critics, including AI scholar Toby Walsh, warn the government risks missing a narrowing window to mitigate harms, echoing concerns raised during the social-media era. The change follows advice from the Productivity Commission cautioning that heavy-handed rules could stifle AI’s economic potential, estimated at $116 billion. The government says insights from the aborted recruitment will inform future policy as the institute launches in early 2026.
Related articles:
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– AI Safety Summit 2023 at Bletchley Park
– UNESCO Recommendation on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence
– OECD Principles on Artificial Intelligence





























