Those with high levels of vocational training, including tradespeople, are least exposed to AI displacement, according to government review
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Artificial intelligence has yet to cause widespread job losses but the federal government has warned that telemarketers, advertising staff and accountants are among the occupations “most exposed” to being replaced by the technology.
According to a first-of-its-kind national report, people in the more exposed occupations are more likely to be women and have university qualifications.
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They suck up energy and water, and blast out heat. Just who is better off from all this investment – aside from tech bros?
The two great existential threats of our time – the climate crisis and AI – come hurtling together in the explosion of datacentres across Australia and around the world.
You can hardly avoid hearing about them these days, either with awed reverence of the promised benefits to humankind or with fear and anger given the implications for the climate, inflation, jobs and even housing affordability.
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The lifting of access limits on GPT-5.6 could democratize AI use, but raises questions about future government influence on tech access.
The post OpenAI releases GPT-5.6 AI models, lifting government limits on public access appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
The post Swyftx Eyes Crypto Payments After Securing License appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Australian crypto exchange Swyftx says it will be seeking opportunities in the crypto payments space after securing a license from Australia’s market regulator. Swyftx said on Wednesday that it received its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), joining the likes of Coinbase, BTC Markets and Crypto.com. The license allows it to offer derivative products, such as crypto options or futures, to retail customers, as well as non-cash payment facility authorization, setting up the fintech to offer payment services to business and retail clients. It does not hold an AFSL to offer spot crypto. “Swyftx won’t be a pure crypto spot exchange in future,” Swyftx interim co-CEO Andrea Yuen told Cointelegraph. “In particular, we see a lot of opportunity in the payments space following local changes to credit card surcharging.” From Oct. 1, Australian businesses will be banned from adding surcharge
The post FOMC Minutes: Why the S&P 500 Needs Rate-Cut Patience appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
It’s minutes week. The Fed will open the hood on its June meeting, and stocks will try to figure out if the engine’s still running smooth or starting to ping. If you care about the S&P 500 holding its massive Q2 run, this one matters. We’ll break down what in the minutes can shake equities, why “patient cuts” beat “fast pivots,” and how jobs, inflation, yields, and the dollar tie together. You’ll get a plain checklist for release day, a sector map for different rate paths, and a read-through for crypto risk. Quick heads-up on timing: the June 16–17, 2026 FOMC minutes hit on Wednesday, July 8 at 2:00 p.m. Eastern. Mark the clock. That’s straight from the Fed’s calendar Federal Reserve (FOMC calendar). The S&P 500’s rally still leans on a slow, steady path to rate cuts rather than an urgent pivot. The market wants confirmation that inflation risks are easing enough to trim rates later this
FOMC minutes and a higher 3.8% 2026 rate path meet a 14.9% Q2 S&P 500 surge. Stocks still need patient cuts, not rushed pivots, to hold gains into H2 as jobs cool.
Andrew Charlton says artificial intelligence ‘cheating, deceiving, going their own way’ – and time to get ahead of it is in testing lab
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Artificial intelligence models are already “cheating, deceiving and going their own way”, Australia’s assistant minister for technology, Andrew Charlton, has warned, as the federal government’s AI Safety Institute begins testing the latest models.
In a speech to an AI safety forum in Sydney on Tuesday, Charlton said safety for AI matters now as “AI systems are already doing things their creators never intended”.
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Australia's AI infrastructure ambitions could diversify its economy, create jobs, and position it as a key player in the Asia-Pacific tech landscape.
The post Australia aims to become Asia-Pacific’s AI infrastructure hub with A$52 billion push appeared first on Crypto Briefing.