Some Investors in AI Are 'Extremely Autocratic,' Says ABC Chair Kim Williams
The Guardian
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- Date Published
- 7 Nov 2025
- Priority Score
- 3
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 8 Nov 2025, 05:05 pm
Description
Exclusive: While fearing the technology can be an ‘employment destroyer’ in other industries, Williams believes it won’t be as damaging for the media
Summary
ABC Chair Kim Williams warns of the potentially dangerous and sinister values reflected in AI technologies, particularly highlighting concerns over the autocratic tendencies of some investors and leaders in the AI industry. He stresses the importance of understanding AI as a transformative tool while cautioning against its use to limit democratic discourse and control societal organization. Williams recognizes AI's potential to improve industries like journalism but expresses concerns about its role as an employment destroyer in other fields. He also addresses the implications of AI on copyright laws, commending the Australian government's stance against exemptions that would favor AI companies over creative rights.
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ABC chair Kim Williams says he is ‘passionately interested in’ in AI and believes the technology ‘will improve journalism’.Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAPView image in fullscreenABC chair Kim Williams says he is ‘passionately interested in’ in AI and believes the technology ‘will improve journalism’.Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAPSome investors in AI ‘are extremely autocratic’, says ABC chair Kim WilliamsExclusive:While fearing the technology can be an ‘employment destroyer’ in other industries, Williams believes it won’t be as damaging for the mediaGet ourbreaking news email,free appordaily news podcastThe chair of the ABC has warned that AI could become “dangerous and sinister” considering some who finance it hold views that are “extremely autocratic”.Kim Williams, who has been chair of the national broadcaster since March 2024, is a prolific user of various AI applications, including ChatGPT, Gemini and Perplexity, saying it is important for people to understand the technology.“I make myself use it and try to understand it … I don’t pretend to be an expert, but I’m certainly actively, passionately interested because it’s the next major technology that is going to change our world,” he told Guardian Australia.Sign up: AU Breaking News email“As with all technology, this is an immensely useful tool. But it’s a tool and we should not treat it as so many others … have: in a rather undisciplined, romantic way.”Williams warned that technology can encompass the values of those who create or control it, and said he was concerned what this might mean for AI.“There are many value constructs that are reflected in AI that can be seen in some ways as being potentially dangerous and sinister,” he said.“Many of the participants in the financing – and even in the origination and leadership of some of the AI [companies] – have unusually severe views of human organisation and politics, and in some instances … have views that are extremely autocratic, and believe in an anointed few being in charge of the many.”ABC executive who sacked Antoinette Lattouf paid $836,000 for eight-month employment, annual report showsRead moreWilliams said that as a believer in democracy and the contest of ideas, it’s “clearly immensely socially dangerous” for people to limit and censor the views of those they disagree with.“We should not underestimate the potency and power of these technologies – and we are seeing living examples of the technologies in the hands of some governments, where we have real life demonstrations of just how dangerous this can be.”Asked whether, he thought media organisations – includingNews Corpandthe Guardian– should be signing deals with AI companies, Williams said everyone needed to carry the responsibility of using these technologies with a sense of the public and national interest.“I speak about it openly with colleagues because I think these things are immensely important.”View image in fullscreenKim Williams says: ‘I think the impact on journalism will probably be a lot more benign. Well, actually, a lot more positive than people think …’Photograph: Mike Bowers/The GuardianAI companies failed to insert a text and mining data exemption into Australian copyright law, which would have allowed them to train AI on creative works without paying for it. Last month, the Albanese governmentruled outintroducing such an exemption.Williams, who chaired the Copyright Agency for six years said people have a right to derive income from their creative work.“Anything that is going to compromise that is not cool, and it’s not acceptable, and that is, as far as I know, illegal,” he said.“And it should get the full … defence and prosecution by government. You’ve got to pay people who have invested their lifetimes in creating works.”Williams said he saw AI as potentially devastating for entry-level jobs in industries such as accounting or law, but he believed the effect on journalism jobs would not be as damaging.“I think the impact on journalism will probably be a lot more benign. Well, actually, a lot more positive than people think because journalists are smart, perspicacious people, and they’ll figure out ways that AI will actually make them better and stronger and will improve journalism,” he said.“But boy, in so many other areas, I just think it can be an employment destroyer.”Explore more on these topicsAustralian Broadcasting CorporationAustralian medianewsShareReuse this content