
- Amy McQuire reflects on the first public inquiry into the crisis of ‘missing’ and murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Australia.
- Don Watson on democracy.
- Dean Ball on the sunset of predictive AI.
- Amani Haydar on writing from and through trauma.
- Paul Powlesland becomes the first juror to swear an oath on river water.
- How to think about the agency and intelligence of a tree.
- This is a wonderful discussion on Schoenberg, which also serves as a great taster, for those yet to read it, for Jeremy Eichler’s brilliant book, Time’s Echo: The Second World War, the Holocaust, and the Music of Remembrance.
- A new study on AI models that are creating ‘irreversible defects in the resulting models’.
- David Gewirtz on how AI scams are infiltrating the knitting and crochet world.
- David Runciman and Helen Lewis reflect on Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird.
- Matthew Milliner on how ‘the theological wisdom of AI is rather limited’.
- Cameron Parsell on why Australia needs permanent supportive housing to end homelessness, and why it will pay for itself.
- A federal antitrust lawsuit against six commercial publishers of academic journals, including Elsevier B.V., John Wiley & Sons, Wolters Kluwer NV, and the International Association of Scientific, Technical and Medical Publishers (STM).