• Society

    Black swan watching


    Kyle McCurdy |  May 15, 2026


    The world has changed and so should our approach to analysing it so we should update our approach and include more deductive techniques to complement strategic decision making.


  • Artificial Intelligence

    AI personalities


    Tamilla Triantoro |  May 15, 2026


    Artificial intelligence models do not have personalities in the human sense; they do not have childhoods, inner motives or self-awareness but, for better or worse, they do display patterns of behavior that people read as personalities.


  • Society

    Do 300,000 Kiwis really believe Canada is building an army of mutant super‑raccoons?


    Mathew Marques |  May 15, 2026


    We’re constantly told a worrying percentage of people believe outlandish things, but do research results like these reflect people giving silly answers or deliberately skewing surveys for fun?


Latest Story

  • Is your chatbot manipulating you?

    Richard Lachman     |      May 14, 2026

    Are AI chatbots like Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini and DeepSeek helping you think or subtly shaping your thoughts by feigning companionship to prolong engagement today and sell you products tomorrow?

  • Where have all the artists gone?

    Ianto Ware     |      May 14, 2026

    The artistic population of Greater Sydney is shrinking and becoming less culturally diverse as housing costs rise.

  • They can’t hold your genes against you

    Jane Tiller     |      May 14, 2026

    A new law will stop life insurers from using “protected genetic information” to discriminate against people when underwriting policies or rejecting claims.

  • Civic patriotism strengthens our democracy

    John Coyne     |      May 13, 2026

    Liberal democracies therefore have a strategic interest in cultivating a confident civic patriotism that strengthens social cohesion, reinforces institutional legitimacy and supports national resilience.

  • Give us a job

    Sharon Parker     |      May 13, 2026

    If worrying about keeping your job has been keeping you up at night, you’re far from alone but despite the threats posed by AI and a potential recession, there are evidence-based things we can do at an individual, organisational and government level to manage job insecurity in uncertain times.

  • Maxing out

    Tim Smartt     |      May 13, 2026

    Counting tokens is one measure of AI activity, which is itself intended as a measure of productivity, which in turn leaves aside the question of what is being produced. Not only is tokenmaxxing a dubious metric in itself, but it may also distort our vision of what actually matters.

  • Off the rails

    John Coyne     |      May 12, 2026

    The cancellation of the troubled inland rail project underlines the fact that Australia struggles to deliver strategic infrastructure at the speed, scale and discipline needed for productivity, resilience and national security.

  • How AI rots our information

    Meg Tapia     |      May 12, 2026

    Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and his Columbia University colleague Maxim Ventura-Bolet argue that AI is destroying our ‘information environment’ through regurgitated slop and deliberate misinformation.

  • AI in the ER

    Ewen Harrison     |      May 12, 2026

    AI systems could help doctors think through a wide range of possible diagnoses when missing a serious condition is the main concern.

  • Slow train coming

    Sarah Cameron     |      May 12, 2026

    In the 2025 Australian federal election, Pauline Hanson’s party received only 6.4% of the national vote. A year later, One Nation has surpassed the Liberal Party in the polls, received more votes than the Liberals in the South Australian election, and won their first seat in the House of Representatives in the Farrer by-election. How it happen?

  • Long hot autumn

    Kimberley Reid     |      May 12, 2026

    After a long, hot, humid summer, cooler showery weather has finally arrived in Sydney. Much of Australia has suffered unusually dry, warm weather this autumn, so what are the causes and what will winter look like?

  • The fallout from Farrer

    Josh Sunman     |      May 11, 2026

    The win in Farrer solidifies One Nation’s position as a political force in rural and regional Australia and heaps the pressure on an increasingly bedraggled Liberal Party.