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PSA: $19 Million to Supporting Your Service


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The Royals’ innovation lab, Advance Party, has trained a computer to talk like Prime Minister Scott Morrison and Opposition leader Bill Shorten in a neural network experiment that examines the power of authenticity. Using 120,000 words of speeches and press conferences from Scott Morrison and Bill Shorten during the 2019 federal election period, and feeding them into a neural network system, Advance Party set out to test the thesis that modern-day politicians have become so robotic and inauthentic that computers can replicate the superficiality of their answers with relative ease. Australians can play Game of Clones at https://vote1.advanceparty.com.au and ask ‘RoboScomo’ and ‘CyberShorten’ probing questions, with a potential 10,000 responses already generated by the system. Neural networks are trained on repetition and become better with continued use. Collecting robot-like sound bites from our political leaders wasn’t hard. The following statement might sound like it was generated by Advance Party’s neural network, but it is in fact a real tweet from @ScottMorrisonMP: “It is my vision for this country as your Prime Minister to keep the Promise of Australia to all Australians.”

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