People routinely misunderstand Judge Dredd but this is an all-time standout: a LinkedIn post saying the lesson we need to learn from it is about human-in-the-loop AI use.
That torment nexus tweet wasn’t satire at all.
When this masthead visited Merrylands on Thursday to talk to locals about their experience of organised crime, no one approached was willing to share their story.
lmao
This is bleak, even for the Torment Nexus.
I’m terrible at picking AI writing. A coin toss would be more reliable than me.
We shouldn’t over-sentimentalise reading as a practice, however I now get student feedback complaints when I set 4 page HBR magazine-style articles as course readings.
Watching The Movie Show episodes from 1999 on SBS on Demand. What an incredible year for film, every episode has a film I still watch or need to rewatch.
Let’s make sure the labelling debacle is the last time a health harming industry is allowed to set the conditions of their own regulation.
“Joe Lim estimates that 90 percent of what you see on the internet is advertising in disguise, and he should know”
Budget for a broken social contract
Greg Jericho on last night’s budget, and the kicking it gives to people with disabilities:
And so now we have a government saying those with disabilities need to be kicked off the NDIS because gas companies need their profits…
Most people know someone on the NDIS, and few would think they are rorting it. The problem, of course, is that the NDIS is a Productivity Commission idea, which believes the private sector delivers better efficiency than the public sector.
It never does. It always leads to profiteering and worse service and yet when you are beholden to neo-liberalism, what need have you for reality?…
Because people know with such things what happens is the shonks rort the system and get away with it, while those with disabilities need to endure the cuts because ‘spending is out of control’.
Hard to walk back the impact of this paper though…
Influential study touting ChatGPT in education retracted over red flags
An important argument, powerfully put by Erin Longbottom. We have an obligation to do better, sectorally and personally.
I’m glad Webex exists because it’s a helpful reminder that there are worse options that I could be forced to use.
More on the Job Ready Graduates Program, a failed, deeply inequitable policy that needs immediate reform:
“The [2025] modelling… shows the number of students with debts over $50,000 has increased by 70%, and humanities students are set to pay off their debts into their 40s.”