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Government Appoints Microsoft's Policy Chief to Direct National AI Centre

Information Age

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Date Published
17 Mar 2025
Priority Score
4
Australian
Yes
Created
17 Mar 2025, 07:26 pm

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Balancing innovation and safety will fall to Lee Hickin.

Summary

The Australian government has appointed Lee Hickin, formerly of Microsoft, to direct the National AI Centre, emphasizing innovation and safety. This appointment is significant as it involves overseeing a $21.6 million investment to enhance Australia’s AI capabilities and advise on safeguards for emerging technologies. Hickin has a history of advocating both the potential benefits of AI and the need for regulatory guardrails, positioning him at the intersection of industry innovation and governmental regulation. The role involves supporting AI startups and implementing safety standards, potentially transforming voluntary guidelines into mandatory regulations for high-risk AI use cases. The appointment highlights ongoing tensions between industry innovation and regulatory measures aimed at mitigating AI risks, reflecting broader global debates on AI policy.

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Gov taps Microsoft’s policy chief to lead National AI CentreBalancing innovation and safety will fall to Lee Hickin.By Jeremy Nadel on Mar 18 2025 11:02 AMPrint articleLee Hickin is leaving Microsoft to take on the role of director of the National AI Centre.Lee Hickin will steer a$21.6 million federal government investmentin Australia’s AI capability and advise on the implementation of hotly debated safeguards for emerging technology.Hickin, who confirmed that he will resign from his current role overseeing Microsoft’s AI policy in Asia,said in a LinkedIn postthat his primary responsibility as director of the National AI Centre would be “helping to drive Australia's AI future.”Innovation vs regulationThe National AI Centre, hosted by theDepartment of Industry Science and Research (DISR), oversees initiatives tofinance local AI startupsand support small to medium businesses to harness machine learning (ML).AlongsideDISR’s AI Expert Group, Hickin will assist industry to implement Australia’sVoluntary AI Safety Standard, which may beelevated to mandatory guardrails for high-risk AI use casesthat vendors arelobbying againstover concerns that they will stifle innovation.Hickin declinedInformation Age’srequests for comment on whether he supports the Albanese Government's proposal for EU-style AI regulations, but said,last year at a roundtable hosted by the Malaysia Digital Economy Corporation, that “AI needs guardrails to protect society and AI needs flexibility to address global issues”.In his post yesterday, he said: “I have long been an advocate for the positive potential for AI in our lives, communities and industry.”The 'ideal fit'Industry MinisterEd Husic said on Linkedinthat Lee’s “30 years of commercial experience” at “companies like Microsoft and Amazon” made “him an ideal fit” for the National AI Centre’s director.Hickin has had two stints at Microsoft; between 2005 to 2015 he held titles including security technology specialist and IoT product manager, then worked at AWS for two years; first as its APAC IoT business development lead and later APAC head of platform technology business development.He returned to Microsoft in 2018 as its chief technology officer and was promoted in 2023 to Asia AI Policy and Lead.Husic added that Hickin was also “bringing… his involvement in shaping AI policies with Government” to the role,including his support developing the “AI Action Plan”and his four years’ experience as a committee member ofAustralia’s firstAI-specific government watchdog, NSW’s “AI Review Committee” (AIRC).Balancing AI innovation with risk mitigationHickin’s dual experience in bothencouraging companies to embrace AI before they get left behindand auditing emerging technology — both internally asthe head of Microsoft’s ANZ Responsible Office of AI, whichaudits ML projects, and externally as a member of the NSW Government’s AIRC — makes him a safe pick.The Government is at a crossroads on whether to follow the EU in passing laws to better protect citizens from the privacy and procedural fairness risks that the private sector’s rapid uptake of AI poses, whichregulatorsandcivil society groupsare calling for, or to side with lobbyists like theBusiness Council of Australiain followingthe US in abstaining from any regulations that could hinder AI-enabled productivity.When Hickin simultaneously worked for AIRC and Microsoft, he deployed Microsoft technology to NSW government agencies that AIRC expressed concerns about, highlighting the difficulty of balancing AI innovation with risk mitigation.At the time,he said that it was “a privilege to work alongside NSW Police” when implementing the AI Insights platformbecause it “can speed up the analysis of evidence, accelerating justice”.However,AIRC’s review of Insightswarned that the AI-generated tool could bias investigations against communities more likely to feature in its surveillance feeds.Further, legal academicsexpressed concernsover its use of biometric ML models, which pose a proportionately higher risk of misidentifying minorities, but Hickin refused to release the audits Microsoft’s Office of Responsible AI conducted to risk-assess the platform, nor provide a summary.Jeremy NadelJeremy Nadel is a Melbourne-based freelancer whose work has been featured inThe Guardian, The Saturday PaperandCrikey.He was most recently a staff reporter forITnewsandCRNreporting on the tech channel and enterprise IT. In 2023, he was awarded Best New Journalist at the Australian IT Journalism Awards. For story tips, you can email Jeremy at[email protected].Tags:national ai centrelee hickinmicrosoftaiinnovationrisksaustralia