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Australian farmers cagey about complex features, desire straightforward AI automation
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Australian farmers are approaching artificial intelligence with cautious pragmatism, expressing skepticism about Silicon Valley’s promises while demanding simple, reliable automation tools. A new study involving over 35 interviews with livestock producers reveals that farmers want “more automation, less features” and worry about “shit in, shit out” data quality, challenging the tech industry’s vision of agriculture’s digital transformation.

What farmers actually want: Australian livestock producers favor straightforward automation over complex AI systems with numerous features.

  • The phrase “more automation, less features” captures their preference for technologies that reliably perform specific tasks rather than “everything apps” popular in Silicon Valley.
  • Farmers want digital tools that mirror the simplicity and clarity of purpose found in traditional farm technologies like windmills, wire fences, and sheepdogs.
  • They seek transparent operations and reliable replacements for human labor, especially given the scarcity of workers in rural Australia.

The data quality concern: Farmers express deep skepticism about AI systems built on unreliable or abstract information.

  • “Shit in, shit out” reflects their earthy version of computer science’s “garbage in, garbage out” principle—meaning if you put bad data into a computer system, you’ll get bad results out.
  • Many farmers don’t trust new technologies if they can’t understand what knowledge and information went into building them.
  • This wariness stems from their sophisticated understanding of their own needs and how technology might help or hinder their operations.

Historical context matters: Past agricultural innovations provide a blueprint for successful technology adoption on farms.

  • The Suzuki Sierra Stockman became iconic on Australian sheep and cattle farms through the 1970s, ’80s and ’90s, not because engineers designed it for livestock work, but because farmers adapted it for cattle drafting.
  • One farmer noted: “Once I learnt that I could actually draft cattle out with the Suzuki, that changed everything. You could do exactly what you did on a horse with a vehicle.”
  • This demonstrates how farmers often repurpose technology in ways manufacturers never envisioned.

The big picture: Over US$200 billion has been invested globally in agricultural technology including pollination robots, smart soil sensors, and AI decision-making systems.

  • Terms like “precision agriculture,” “smart farming,” and “agriculture 4.0” describe a future where remote sensing, autonomous vehicles, and AI prediction systems transform farming operations.
  • However, computers remain largely office technologies rather than paddock tools, though this is changing as sensors integrate into water tanks, soil monitors, and in-paddock scales.
  • More data input from these sensors creates greater scope for AI systems to help farmers make decisions.

Why this matters: The success of AI in agriculture will depend as much on farmer adaptation as on developer innovation.

  • Farmers have consistently shown they can transform technologies to meet their specific needs, suggesting AI’s agricultural future may look different from current tech industry visions.
  • The research indicates that for AI to achieve iconic status alongside traditional farm tools, it must be simple, adaptable, and reliable.
  • This farmer-driven approach to technology adoption challenges the top-down narrative of agricultural digitization promoted by tech companies.
‘Shit in, shit out’: AI is coming for agriculture, but farmers aren’t convinced

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