@AICollaborative are based in Adelaide. For my overseas tweeps, Adelaide is on the coast kind of halfway across Australia - 3.5 hours by plane from Perth (on the west side) and 2hrs by plane from Sydney (east side).
I want to emphasise the planes because something I noticed coming back to Oz is that overseas consultants/orgs often fail to conceptualise how spread out Australia is. This has big implications for projects requiring community engagement.
None of the major cities are connected by fast/regular trains. There are multiple time zones, plane travel is expensive, and there is no one major city that's a clear "hub" for the tech industry. There are people and orgs doing amazing stuff everywhere.
This means people tasked with community engagement (e.g. fed . gov consultations) often end up embarking on roadshows (flyshows) to cities around Oz, for in person round tables, typically once per project. There are always cities that miss out. They can be badly signposted.
And we talk a lot about harnessing tech to engage communities across the country but usually that means either a survey or a YouTube video or a live stream.
What I loved about @AICollaborative's event is it connected with communities online, *as well as* making use of physical communities in other cities. They partnered with a bunch of orgs: @LotFourteen@PawseyCentre@responsible_ai, Women in ML and Data Science, Enterprize...
There was a packed out room in Adelaide, a livestream, and livestreams to groups of people coming together in Hobart, Brisbane, Sydney, Canberra, Melbourne and Perth. That is every major city except Darwin (and I know @yolandasamy tried).
The vibe in Adelaide was warm, friendly, open. They had a code of conduct! They had a diversity and inclusion statement. A team of amazing volunteers from gov, industry, startups (who I dare not list here because I'll forget someone, so @yolandasamy and @nlothian can add them).
There were no egos, no eye-rolling. Just eagerness to learn some things from each other and talk about hard AI problems. @nlothian was running around keeping the livestream going, monitoring online questions, trying to keep it as inclusive for other cities as possible.
Basically @AICollaborative are doing exactly what their name suggests: building a collaborative network. And knowing how vast and isolated and challenging Australia can feel, it made my heart sing.
But oh my god is it WORK. I mean, I think this kind of engagement should be the norm for high impact consultations/projects that require input from across Australia. But it is hard and requires a lot of prep and did I mention @AICollaborative are all volunteers?
Community engagement is exhausting and time consuming and the work involved typically unfunded. People run on passion and energy until they run out.
What @AICollaborative 's event showed me was that where there *is* funding for community engagement (where we pay outside consultants big bucks to do engagement, or gov is doing consultations), we don't do them nearly well enough.
I have taken away lessons in how to do engagement more effectively from @AICollaborative, and warm fuzzies about the sheer number of people across Oz interested in these topics. Can someone give them more money already? To do more cool things (and have their time paid for).
So congratulations @yolandasamy@nlothian@AICollaborative and your army of volunteers for a lovely event. And thank you @TheAIML for supporting their event, and bringing me along to talk to your community as well.
From @AIML, @MsAliAnderson is doing incredible things to change the way computer science and STEM engages and inspires. For girls and women, for policy makers and businesses, for mathematicians and engineers.
Again, no ego. A gutsy determination to push the domain further. A Keen sense of how to translate complex ML into insights communities can engage with. I am excited to watch what @TheAIML does with @MsAliAnderson involved.
Long thread, but I had to share. Follow all the names and organisations in this thread, they connect AI interests across Australia. And I apologise in advance to everyone who asks me in person "how was Adelaide?" over the next couple of weeks and hears this all over again. 🙃
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This makes me so angry. Every story like this make me angry. My non law followers have to understand: an associate to a high court justice is one of *the* most prized graduate positions on finishing law school, if not the most. (THREAD)
Around Australia, law students from every school apply. Because it’s such a prized position, students who are offered these positions usually have a bunch of offers to pick from (because they’re the best). And because it’s prestigious, other offers will typically work around it.
So we’re talking best of the best students, who when they finish the associateship will go on to join a top corporate law firm (“magic circle” or “top tier” firms), or the state solicitor’s office, or a fed gov graduate job.
Looking across state bushfire maps this morning. On the list of things to review when this crisis is over is a federally coordinated standard for describing and visualising fire movements. Just have a look:
Here is the Victorian government bushfire map. There's a lot going on. Note that the visualisation of bushfire hazards stops at the Victorian border, so the south coast looks hazard free. emergency.vic.gov.au/respond/#
And as @corduroy pointed out in an earlier tweet, they have 47 different indicator icons. Keep on eye on those indicator icons because...
Making me uneasy right now: tech "solutionism" extending to tech ethics. I've spoken to several tech teams, in different organisations, who are developing their own ethics principles/frameworks without doing any ethics research or engaging with ethicists. 1/
The terminology can be alienating, and there are rarely clear answers, but choosing not to acquaint yourself with the field at *all* in translating ethics for tech is...naive at best, arrogant/ignorant at worst.
I'm not an ethicist, but in the course of investigating AI ethics I've learnt *so much* from business ethicists, public service ethicists, classical ethicists. About how ethics principles have been applied and when things go wrong. These help me make my thoughts sharper.