This week, Andrew Charlton, the federal assistant minister for science and technology, issued a stark warning about artificial intelligence (AI).
Speaking at the AI Safety Forum at the University of Sydney, he said powerful AI models “are already doing things their creators never intended: cheating, deceiving, going their own way”.
In response, the Australian government has established the AI Safety Institute under its National AI Plan. Charlton described it as “a national testing capability” and provided the most detailed public account yet of the work it will do.
But will it be enough to keep Australians safe from what could be one of the most powerful, rapidly advancing technologies the world has known?
The harms are already here
AI’s risks and harms are already affecting Australians.
There are the problems we are already seeing today: nudify apps, more sophisticated scams and deepfakes, voice cloning, chatbots that have isolated teens and encouraged harms, and heightened cybersecurity risks that are alarming our security agencies.
Beyond immediate and present harms, experts are sounding the alarm about what’s coming. This includes rapidly expanding capabilities and agentic AI that we don’t yet have controls for.
In a report published last week, the United Nations’ Independent International Scientific Panel on AI also raised concerns about global concentration of power, resources, AI capability, inequality, and the technology’s impact on how we think, reason and work.
A significant remit
The AI Safety Institute has three broad tasks, as Andrew Charlton explained at this week’s forum. First, analysing and testing new models. Second, supporting government regulators and agencies to respond to emerging AI capabilities, risks, harms and trends. Third, shaping safe AI development, deployment and international governance in Australia’s interests.
It is already doing work on multi-agent risks with the Gradient Institute).
You’ve probably already heard about AI agents that can book your table at a restaurant or plan your travel. The basic idea of an AI agent is an AI system that can plan and take action with limited supervision (for longer and longer periods too). When AI agents interact with each other without supervision, unpredictable risks can arise.
The AI Safety Institute is also working with the CSIRO on AI alignment – the science of trying to ensure that AI systems (and AI agents) act in ways that are aligned with their users’ values and goals. This matters because at this stage, we cannot fully predict how AI will act. There are plenty of experiments in which AI has deceived users or avoided human-imposed controls, even detecting (and underperforming) when it is being tested.
The head of the AI Safety Institute, philosopher and Royal Australian Air Force reservist Kate Conroy, also spoke at this week’s forum. She outlined plans to take on both immediate harms affecting Australians, with attention to those affecting the most marginalised and vulnerable, as well as frontier risks and harms.



