Tuesday, December 16, 2025

The four departments where APS6 employees are paid six figures

The four departments where APS6 employees are paid six figures 

By Lucinda Garbutt-Young December 15 2025 

Staff at Treasury are among the best-paid and happiest in the public service, compared with counterparts earning tens of thousands of dollars

The Canberra Times has analysed base salaries for Australian Public Service 6 (APS6) and Executive Level 2 (EL2) employees at each department, along with the two largest agencies, Services Australia and the Australian Taxation Office. 



The Department of Education, at which Tony Cook is the secretary, has the highest base salary rate for APS6 employees. Picture by Gary Ramage

Monday, December 15, 2025

Old Teslas Are Falling Apart

Old Teslas Are Falling Apart Futurism


Nordic people know how to beat the winter blues. Here’s how to find light in the darkest months


FOR BEST RESULTS, TAKE IT WITH COFFEE AND RED WINE WHILE SITTING IN THE SUN:  Dark Chocolate Compound Linked To Slower Aging


Book Review: Harnessing the Power of Dreams and Nightmares

In “Nightmare Obscura,” scientist Michelle Carr argues that our dreams are essential pillars of who we are.


Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Work

National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 2025. Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Work. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) promise to improve productivity significantly, but there are many questions about how AI could affect jobs and workers. 

Recent technical innovations have driven the rapid development of generative AI systems, which produce text, images, or other content based on user requests – advances which have the potential to complement or replace human labor in specific tasks, and to reshape demand for certain types of expertise in the labor market. 

Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Work evaluates recent advances in AI technology and their implications for economic productivity, the workforce, and education in the United States. 

The report notes that AI is a tool with the potential to enhance human labor and create new forms of valuable work – but this is not an inevitable outcome. Tracking progress in AI and its impacts on the workforce will be critical to helping inform and equip workers and policymakers to flexibly respond to AI developments.



Every Legal Team Needs to See This LLM Leak

Brainyacts: 1. A user pulled out an internal company document just by prompting. Let that sink in. A determined user was able to extract, through the chat interface, an internal memo that was never meant to be disclosed. Not “state secret” level, but still: a company document that describes how the model is trained and how it should behave came out the front door via text. No hacking. Just prompting. If you’re not at least a little freaked out by that, you’re not thinking hard enough about what your own deployments might be leaking or exposing over time.

2. Your system prompt is part of your compliance architecture, whether you like it or not.

  • Quick reminder: the system prompt is the invisible layer that sits between your users and the model.
  • Your employees type a prompt → it passes through the system prompt → the model’s answer passes back through that same system prompt.
  • That hidden layer is where you (or your vendor) control things like tone, friendliness, how robust the response is, what’s off-limits, and a lot of other behavioral nuance.
  • If your org has written or tweaked that system prompt, congratulations: you’ve just created a new surface area of liability and governance. That text is now part of your internal control stack. My guess? Most teams haven’t treated it that way yet.

3. Prompting isn’t “asking questions.” It’s steering the engine. Every prompt nudges the model’s reasoning path and risk tolerance. There are deeper levels of prompting: framing, context-setting, role instructions that can materially change what the model will and won’t do. Any user in your org can do this, often without realizing how much they’re steering. That’s power, but it’s also a governance problem.

4. The model infers intent and identity, and that cuts both ways. Claude doesn’t actually know who’s on the other side. It guesses based on what’s written. That means an employee can “speak as” a colleague, a client, a regulator, or a fictional role and the model will adjust its behavior accordingly. There’s value in that (testing scenarios, simulating counterparties), but there’s also obvious room for mischief, misrepresentation, and internal confusion if you don’t put rails around it.

5. The real risk isn’t just what the AI might do. It’s how you deploy it. The big frontier here isn’t “rogue AI.” It’s:

  • what data you’re feeding these models,
  • how your system prompts are written,
  • how third-party models are wired into your stack, and
  • how little formal oversight exists at that deployment layer.

This is way bigger than having a polite “AI usage policy” on your intranet. This is infrastructure-level compliance and governance. And it’s coming for everyone. To make this as practical as possible, I also created a one-page AI Deployment Risk Playbook that you can download and share with your leadership team. It’s a concise PDF designed for GCs, CISOs, CTOs, KM leaders, and anyone responsible for governing AI inside their organization. Download the one-page guide here

GABBIE: Bondi beach - SNAIL FARMING TO DODGE TAXES?

SNAIL FARMING TO DODGE TAXES? The snail farm don: is this the most brazen tax avoidance scheme of all time?


Bondi Beach shooting witnesses recall running for their lives as attack unfolded


Slovak Consulate 

One of the victims was Slovakian, says presidentpublished at 21:31 15 December

The president of Slovakia has identified one of the victims of yesterday's attacks as a Slovakian woman called Marika.

Peter Pellegrini says on X: "Already yesterday, I unequivocally condemned the brutal, deadly attack on innocent people during the Hanukkah celebrations at Australia’s Bondi Beach and expressed my deep solidarity with a nation plunged into grief and shock.

"Today, that grief has reached Slovakia as well — among the victims of this senseless, violent rampage was a Slovak woman, Marika."

Earlier, local media reported that an 82-year-old, Marika Pogany, had died in the attacks. It's not known if it's the same person.

Pogany was an avid volunteer and a member of the Harbour View Bridge Club, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.

"She was a terrific person, excellent bridge player, and an even better friend. Incredibly loyal. I knew her for 40 years," Matt Mullamphy, the bridge club's director, said.


For the first time since Trump’s tariff rollout, import tax revenue has fallen, threatening his lofty plans to slash the $38 trillion national debt Fortune


SKYNET SMILES: Europe faces Robocop-style dystopia by 2035, EU police claim.

Angry mobs of unemployed citizens riot in the streets against the hordes of service robots that have stolen their jobs. Police officers armed with “robo freezer guns” and “nano net grenades” shoot down swarms of drones deployed by terrorists to attack electricity and water supplies.

 

We Asked Critics From Authoritarian Regimes What They Wish They’d Known Sooner. “You cannot make authoritarian leaders the center of your narrative. You have to make the people the center of your narrative, and you have to be passionate about it.”


The ATO is meant to be bringing work back in-house. But its target to cut consultants is ‘woefully inadequate’



The Anti-MAGA Economics of the Second Trump Administration

How Trump has defaulted on his MAGA promises


Billionaire Palantir Co-Founder Pushes Return of Public Hangings as Part of ‘Masculine Leadership’ Initiative Common Dreams


Why Does the End of the World Look So Profitable? OilPrice


Polygenic overlap across psychiatric disorders?


 Did humans make fire earlier than we had thought?


In Development is a new magazine dedicated to exploring how progress actually happens in the developing world. We publish narrative-driven essays on ideas, policies, and technologies that have the possibility to, or are already, improving global well-being.”  A call for pitches


Goodreads for papers


Australia’s world-first social media ban is a ‘natural experiment’ for scientists Nature


The lucky country is quickly becoming the lazy land, and we will pay

We will get own version of Donald Trump one day, whether we like it or not. And for good or ill, the pendulum will swing back savagely in the other direction.


Sunday, December 14, 2025

Bondi beach shooting: At least 12 people dead including one shooter after gunfire attack; another alleged shooter in critical condition

Multiple gunshots were heard on Bondi late on Sunday, with beachgoers fleeing the popular tourist site at the height of the holiday period.


Bondi beach shooting: 16 dead - vigils held for victims as more than A$1m raised for man who tackled shooter – as it happened


A 10-year-old, two rabbis and a Holocaust survivor - Who are the Bondi shooting victims?


Father and son who killed 15 people at Bondi named, as Australian PM pushes for tougher gun laws


ABC Australia What we know so far about the Bondi Beach shooting


At least 12 people dead as Bondi Beach attack declared act of terrorism

Rabbi Eli Schlanger, a Chabad emissary based in Sydney, has been identified as the first victim of the mass shooting at a Hanukkah party at Bondi Beach, a spokesman for the movement told The Times of Israel.

First Bondi gunman is identified as police raid his Sydney home


Bondi beach mass shooting: 10 people killed after gunshots fired at Sydney park hosting Jewish festival


Police have confirmed that the arrested man is Naveed Akram, 24, from Bonnyrigg in Sydney’s south-west. Akram remains in custody, where emergency services are treating his wounds. Officers are now raiding his home in Bonnyrigg, which his family has owned for a year.

There are claims that he is likely from Pakistan. A photo of an ID card has spread online, showing the name “Naveed Akram” and an address in Bonnyrigg, NSW 2177. Reports describe him as an immigrant who held a valid firearms license


Hero bystander tackles Bondi Beach shooter Incredible footage shows an apparent civilian heroically tackling and disarming one of the Bondi Beach shooters — before laying down the weapon and letting him go. 

Bondi beach shooting live updates: 10 people dead including one shooter after gunfire attack; another alleged shooter in critical condition

Graphic footage shows NSW Police officers giving CPR to one of the suspected shooters in Sunday night’s mass shooting at Bondi Beach.


Hero bystander named after tackling Bondi Beach shooter

On Saturday night, last night, we walked the peaceful streets of Bondi and tonight the shooting tragedy feels so surreal …

I have lived in peaceful Bondi area for several decades and I often go to Bondi beach… 

Dr Russell Cope And John Hatton AO

All of the Rivers

How does lake ice do this? Incredible! (Mirror Lake, New Hampshire)


From artist Miya Ando, Water of the Sky, A Dictionary of 2,000 Japanese Rain Words

Through a collection of 2,000 Japanese words, their English interpretations, and 100 drawings, Ando describes the breadth and diversity of rain’s many expressions: when it falls, how it falls, and how its observer might be transformed physically or emotionally by its presence.

I paged through this at a bookstore recently; it is delightful. From an excerpt of the book, here are a few of Ando’s rain words & phrases:

Tokidoki Niwaka Ame: Sometimes light snow and rain showers

Ama ga Nukeru: The skies open up, it rains like cats and dogs

Shinotsukuame: Intense rain that falls heavily, is very fine and strong like the Bamboo Grove at Shinotake

Giu: False rain

Amadoi: Sliding red beans to resemble the sound of rain

Kōu: Rain that comes exactly when you were waiting for it

Water of the Sky is available at BookshopAmazon, and wherever books are sold.


Eight Million Ways to Happiness: Wisdom for Inspiration and Healing from the Heart of Japan. “Hiroko awakens readers to the idea of a traditional spiritual flexibility that seamlessly coexists with the modern secular world…”


Kendrick Lamar Sydney: Times, set list, tickets, getting there & everything you need to know


The Sunday Morning Movie Presents: Stalker (1979) Run Time: 2H 41M

Stalker is a sci-fi movie about truth and desire


Art is valuable precisely because it is not easy to create. We are interested in art, in any and all of its forms, because humans made it. That’s the very thing that makes it interesting; the who, the how, and especially the why.”




All of the Rivers

Perhaps inspired by All Streets, Ben Fry’s map of all the streets in the US, Nelson Minar built a US map out of all the rivers in the country.


Film-maker Marshall Curry pulls back the curtain on the beloved institution in a revealing and celebratory new film



My Recent Media Diet, the Japan Edition

Konnichiwa! I’m back from Japan and finally getting over my jetlag, which took much longer than I expected. Here’s a list of all the things I’ve been reading, watching, listening to, and experiencing over the past few months. Let us know what movies, books, art, TV, music, etc. you’ve been enjoying in the comments below!

Deacon King Kong by James McBride. This was my first time reading anything by McBride and maybe I have a new favorite author? I love everything about this story and the way he tells it. (A+)

The Da Vinci Code. One of my go-to comfort movies. “Scientific” art history detective story? Yes, please. (A)


One Battle After Another. Great. Especially Sean Penn. And it reminded me of a Wes Anderson movie for some reason? Like one that he would have made had he followed the Bottle Rocket path instead of the Rushmore Path. (A+)

Meredith Dairy Marinated Sheep & Goat Cheese. All cheese is delicious, but this one particularly so. (A)

Fantastic Four. It was ok? Aside from a few things, I’m having trouble getting excited about post-Infinity Saga Marvel. There was just a special alchemy about that whole arc that is proving impossible to reproduce. (B)

The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton.Fantastic right from the first page. Sharp writing about social mores, reminded me of Middlemarch & Price and Prejudice in that respect. One of my all-time favorites, I think. (A+)

The Gilded Age (season three). Still enjoying the hell out of this show. Total suspension of disbelief is a must. (A-)

Mission: Impossible. I haven’t seen this in maybe 20 years and I guess it holds up? Not my favorite of the series though. (B+)


Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy. Great spy thriller. Gary Oldman is fantastic in this. Cold War? Spies? Britain? I will pretty much watch as many of this type of movie as you can make. (A)

Leaving America. This is a 12-part podcast on the logistics, benefits, and challenges of leaving the United States. Oh, no reason. (B+)

The Fellowship of the Ring (and TT & ROTK) by J.R.R. Tolkien. It’s been a while since I’ve read The Lord of the Rings books and wow, are they long. There’s entirely too much “and they travelled from here to there” logistics that drag on over several pages and descriptions of hilltops & ancient landmarks that you only hear about once. But Andy Serkis narrating the audiobook? So good. (A-)

The Lord of the Rings trilogy. After each audiobook, I watched the extended version of the corresponding film. My general feeling after 65+ hours of audiobook and 12+ hours of movie is that the books are too long and the movies too short. An 18-hour mini-series — perhaps three seasons of six episodes each? — seems like the sweet spot. (A)

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (season three). Maybe didn’t enjoy this quite as much as the previous two season, but I love spending time with these people and look forward to doing more of that when season four drops. (B+)

Jaws. Got to see this in the theater when they released it for the 50th anniversary. Spielberg had such a strong style right from the jump. (A-)

Paradise. Just fine. But I feel like there are better apocalyptic shows out there. (B)

Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale. It was so nice to head to the theater to nestle myself into the low-stakes world of Downton Abbey for 2 hours. (B+)


Daft Punk Fortnite. Love anything with Daft Punk. (A)

The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store by James McBride. Right after finishing Deacon King Kong, I did something I almost never do: started in on a different book from the same author. Loved this one too. (A+)

Tron: Ares. It was a loud NIN music video on a huge screen, what’s not to like? Jared Leto was fine, but there were probably better casting options here that the audience would have been more excited about. And the direction could have been stronger…Gillian Anderson and Greta Lee were both surprisingly meh. (B+)


Tron: Ares soundtrack. Better than the movie. (A-)

Total Recall. First time! Maybe a little too Verhoeven/B-movie for me. (C+)

Cars. I’ve seen this movie several times and what I noticed this time around is how incredibly expressive the cars are. You can just tell they worked very hard on that aspect of the animation. (A-)

Shopkeeping by Peter Miller. This was recommended from a couple of different vectors — pretty sure one was Robin Sloan. Lots of resonance to my work here and how I think about it (and want to think about it). (A-)

Japan. Absolutely loved it. (A+)

Iyoshi Cola. Craft colas are often disappointing, but this one was absolutely delicious. Wish I could get it in the States for less than $14 a can. (A)

photo of a person standing in a mirrored room with lights all over

teamLab Borderless. Some of this was too “built for Instagram” but a couple of the rooms (the one where it felt like the whole room was moving & the cathedralish one with the light strings) were great. (A-)

The Sumida Hokusai Museum. Had to make the pilgrimage here. (A-)

In Praise of Shadows by Jun’ichirō Tanizaki.Read this book about Japanese aesthetics while visiting Japan — it provided an interesting context. (B+)

Hokusai at Creative Museum Tokyo.Fantastic show…there were hundreds and hundreds of prints and drawings that showed his evolution and influence. (A+)

Okunoin Cemetery. Had one of the strongest senses of place I have ever experienced. (A)

Konbini. The Japanese convenience stores really are as appealing as you’ve heard. (A-)

Awakening Your Ikigai by Ken Mogi. Perhaps a little over-simplifying when it comes to Japanese culture, but I appreciated the message of having a purpose. (B)

Sho-Chan Okonomiyaki. When I got to Hiroshima, I knew I had to try their version of okonomiyaki, so I went to Okonomimura, a multi-story building crammed with okonomiyaki restaurants. I picked one and had one of the most surprising meals of my trip. So good. (A)

Blue Planet Sky by James Turrell

Blue Planet Sky. I spent a lot of time sitting in this room by James Turrell. (A)

Kanazawa Phonograph Museum. Lovely little museum, and a good opportunity to observe how successful inventions move from technology to culture/fashion/commerce. (A)

Princess Mononoke. I saw this in the theater on my last full day in Tokyo; they recently released a 4K remaster. Absolutely breathtaking. (A+)

Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.Redford and Newman are both total smokeshows in this. And I’d forgotten how goofy this movie is. (B+)


A House of Dynamite. A very tough watch, but I thought this was fantastic as a tour of some of the different kinds of people who hold the fate of every single person on the planet in their hands every damn day. They’re tired, stressed, distracted, at cross-purposes with themselves, set in their ways, more celebs than leaders, and mediocre. And none of them have ever seen Dr. Strangelove? (A)

Past installments of my media diet are available here. What good things have you watched, read, or listened to lately?