ITP TECHBLOG
Category
- AI
- Careers
- Cartoons
- Climate Change
- Democracy
- Diversity
- Education
- Events
- Getting Started
- Government
- ITP News
- Industry News
- Innovation
- Legal
- Membership
- Mental Health
- Navigating Change
- Regional Spotlight
- Regulation
- Security
- Skills
- Society
- Telecommunications
- Women in technology
- advice
- bridging the gap
- ethics
- growing the industry
- industry news
- tech talk
Where would we be without the UFB? A lot less productive
Access to ultrafast broadband could add $163 billion to GDP over the next decade as the high-speed network enables new digital services and uptake increases.
NZ is encouraging the use of AI – but it’s largely outsourcing the risks and societal costs
As investment in generative AI continues to grow globally, New Zealand’s government has been implementing its use across the public sector and businesses to embrace the technology’s potential. But the environmental, social and governance risks and costs of AI remain under-investigated.
Google Street View a quick way to assess fall risk - NZ researchers
New Zealand university researchers have come up with a novel use of Google’s free Street View service to analyse public roads and footpaths for their risk of causing falls.
AI is a multi-billion dollar industry. It’s underpinned by an invisible and exploited workforce
In dusty factories, cramped internet cafes and makeshift home offices around the world, millions of people sit at computers tediously labelling data. These workers are the lifeblood of the burgeoning artificial intelligence (AI) industry.
Griffin on Tech: Google’s brinksmanship, Govt’s tech progress a year on
Google is threatening to pull New Zealand news snippets from its search and Google News platforms. But the Government should hold firm in a rare effort to address the power imbalance between Big Tech and nations grappling with the implications of their influence.
Is big tech harming society? To find out, we need research – but it’s being manipulated by big tech itself
When platforms control access to the “product”, they also control the science around its impacts. Ultimately, these self-research funding models allow platforms to put profit before people – and divert attention away from the need for more transparency and independent oversight.