Thursday, November 02, 2023

Berejiklian corruption probe sent clear message to politicians, ICAC chief says

 

People pretend not to like grapes when the vines are too high for them to reach.

~ Marguerite de Navarre


John Inazu (Washington University; Google Scholar), Learning from Failure

The chief commissioner of NSW’s anti-corruption watchdog has praised the high-profile investigation into former premier Gladys Berejiklian for sending a clear message to politicians about the use of power.
In the Independent Commission Against Corruption’s annual report, tabled in parliament on Monday, chief commissioner John Hatzistergos said the inquiry dubbed Operation Keppel was a reminder to public officials that they had an obligation to report and manage conflicts of interest.
The report also revealed that Ruth McColl SC, who oversaw the Berejiklian inquiry, was paid $232,200 to draft her report once her initial appointment expired.
Berejiklian has launched legal action against the ICAC’s finding that she engaged in serious corrupt conduct in relation to her secret relationship with the then Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire.
One of the grounds of Berejiklian’s appeal is that McColl was not authorised to make the corruption finding because the former judge was no longer a commissioner when she completed the report, and so was not authorised to prepare it from November 1, 2022, onwards.
The annual report said McColl was retained as a consultant when her appointment expired and was paid more than $230,000 to finalise her report.
The ICAC report, released on June 29, found Berejiklian breached public trust and partially exercised her official functions in 2016 and 2017, as treasurer and later premier, when the state government made a $5.5 million grant to the Australian Clay Target Association in Maguire’s electorate. She did not disclose her close personal relationship with Maguire at the time.
It also found Berejiklian breached public trust and partially exercised her official functions in 2018 in connection with $30 million promised to the Riverina Conservatorium of Music for a recital hall, also in Maguire’s electorate. Ultimately, $20 million of that money was not paid.
Berejiklian has always denied any wrongdoing.


There’s Only So Much Propaganda Spin You Can Put On The Murder Of Thousands Of ChildrenCaitlin Johnstone

Lessig on why AI and social media are causing a free speech crisis for the internet



The Verge: Harvard Professor Lawrence Lessig – After 30 years teaching law, the internet policy legend is as worried as you’d think about AI and TikTok — and he has surprising thoughts about balancing free speech with protecting democracy. Nilay Patel: “…Larry and I talked about the current and recurring controversy around react videos on YouTube, not what they are but what they represent: the users of a platform trying to establish their own culture around what people can and cannot remix and reuse — their own speech regulations based in copyright law. 

That’s a fascinating cultural development. There’s a lot of approaches to create these types of speech regulations that get around the First Amendment, and I wanted to know how Larry felt about that as someone who has been writing about speech on the internet for so long. His answers really surprised me. Of course, we also had to talk about artificial intelligence. You’ll hear us pull apart two different types of AI that are really shaping our cultural experiences right now. There’s algorithmic AI, which runs the recommendation engines on social platforms and tries to keep you engaged. 

And then there’s the new world of generative AI, which everyone agrees is a huge risk for the spread of misinformation, both today and in the future, but which no two people seem to agree on how to tackle. Larry’s thoughts here were also surprising. Maybe, he says, we need to get all of politics offline if we’re going to solve this problem.”