Amid the AI carnage, the real opportunity is backing ASX tech companies with entrenched customers, regulatory moats and pricing power.
Artificial intelligence
The accounting software platform has teamed up with its would-be disruptor. Investors think other battered SaaS names could follow its lead.
Anthropic’s Canberra roadshow was less about its AI model Claude than a far more important product: a close relationship with the Australian state.
Dario Amodei warned Australian politicians that AI’s risks are real and the timeline is short — and that democracies must win the race to build it.
The ASX-listed GP staking shop has been unfairly caught on the wrong side of the AI trade dominating markets. Now it’s playing offence.
Artificial intelligence, an oil crisis and political turmoil are colliding across markets and business. Some cashed-up investors see opportunity in the chaos.
The world’s most principled AI boss’ visit to Australia will include talks on democracy, data centres and the future of government.
AI could make software cheaper to build, but trusted systems that hold data, enforce rules and survive regulatory scrutiny will only become more valuable.
Anyone can bolt on a busted chatbot. The single most important AI investment is the tooling to measure whether any of it actually works.
AI and economic crisis top Australians’ security fears. But half think a military attack is probable
A comprehensive new report, which engaged with 20,000 people, shows Australians have a nuanced view of national security. But concerns of an attack on local soil are elevated.
As AI companies soften their safety commitments, businesses and governments must assume the risks of deployment are now theirs to manage.
OpenAI’s Asia-Pacific startup lead came to Adelaide with credits, a warning about viral growth, and a case for why the fundamentals of building a good business haven’t changed.
With AI-driven trading speeding up global markets, the country’s settlement infrastructure will become a costly drag on competitiveness, resilience and growth.
The appointment lands as the federal government considers reforms to Australia’s copyright licensing regime to ensure AI companies pay for content.
It sounds like a plot line out of a Marvel movie. But Cortical Labs has launched what it claims is the world’s first biological data centre, using human brain cells — and much less energy than traditional infrastructure.
Behind the AI copyright debate is a bigger fight over whether Australia will protect the information ecosystem our democracy relies on.
Atlassian is cutting 1,600 staff as it bets on AI, putting the spotlight on its unique and precarious exposure to the upheaval tearing through the software industry.
It was an agonising 20 minutes this morning for staff at Australia’s most celebrated tech company, as they awaited their fate after months of AI driven turmoil.