Francis Hunger via nettime-l on Tue, 15 Oct 2024 14:44:21 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Conference in Munich, Nov 5: If AI was the answer what was the question, again? |
Save the Date on Nov 5, 2024 class for Emergent Digital Media at AdBK Munich presents: *If AI was the answer what was the question, again?*/Conference on Tue, Nov 5, 09–18 at AdBK Munich, Akademiestraße 2, Main Building, Central Lecture Hall, free admission/
With: Elisa Giardina Papa, Orit Halpern, Francis Hunger, Vladan Joler, Kevin B. Lee, RYBN, Felix Stalder, Hito Steyerl
The political economy of AI impacts on both its generative output as well as on art scenes and creative labor. Which strategies and tactics can artists employ in a sphere of corporate generative media to avoid redundancy and their own obsolescence? The conference tackles these questions through multiple perspectives: Theft and extraction of data from users to train large generative AI models. The replacement of human labor, or the simulation of machine labor through human labor. The environmental impact of heavy computation. How do these become visible within generative output? How do they modify the conditions of artistic labor and what are strategies of resistance against corporate extraction? How can art and art education react in the face of the serious challenges to arts‘ aesthetic and material environment? *Schedule* 09.00 Talk: Felix Stalder – Unreal Creations. Generative AI as premonition 10.00 Elisa Giardina Papa – Surrogate Data and Ungovernable Data11.00 Vladan Joler – Calculating Empires: A Genealogy of Technology and Power Since 1500
12.00 Break 13.00 RYBN – Human Computers, a laborious mediarcheological study 14.00 Kevin B. Lee – The Generative Afterlife of an Extremist Archive15.00 Orit Halpern – Speculative Nets: Artificial Intelligence, Finance, and Reactionary Politics
16.00 AUDIO, PLATFORMS, LABOR, intervention 17.00 Response by Hito Steyerl and Francis Hunger *Abstracts* Felix Stalder – Unreal Creations. Generative AI as premonitionIt is often said that generative AI is conservative, even reactionary, that it can only recreate versions of the past, contained in its training data. That data, it is also regularly pointed out that, contains mainly historical biases which generative AI reproduced and amplifies. Both of these claims are correct, and trigger calls to make AI more fair, accountable and transparent. In my talk, I want to shift away from such questions of representation, and focus on the generative dimension. Generative AI produces “unreal data” that is, presentation of things that do not exist, but might come into existence based on that data. They are premonitions of worlds to come. Thus, the question we need to ask, is perhaps less if the images (videos, texts, and sounds) are correct or fair, but whether the worlds they envision are desirable.
Elisa Giardina Papa – Surrogate Data and Ungovernable Data In this talk, Elisa Giardina Papa will outline the theoretical and archivaresearch which informs two of her video installations, Technology of Care and Cleaning Emotional Data. Presenting images she collected while working as a “data cleaner” for various AI systems, she will address the ways in which machines are disciplined and trained to see. Tracing, bounding-boxing, and labeling are key operations used to teach machines to separate Data from data, signal from noise, and orderly things from disorderly ones. They are also, Giardina Papa argues, the onto-epistemological operations of modern imperial and colonial conquest. Ultimately, this talk will be an invitation to reflect on modes of seeing otherwise which remain radically unruly, irreducible,
and incomputable.Vladan Joler – Calculating Empires: A Genealogy of Technology and Power Since 1500
Calculating Empires is a large-scale research visualization and physical installation exploring how technical and social structures co-evolved over five centuries. It traces technological patterns of colonialism, militarization, automation, and enclosure since 1500 to show how these forces still subjugate and how they might be unwound. In this guided tour, Vladan Joler will deep dive into some of the shifts in communication technologies, infrastructures, and computational architectures, and how they are entwined with the histories of social control and classification.
RYBN – Human Computers, a laborious mediarcheological study“Human Computer” (RYBN.ORG, 2015–2022) is a mediarcheological investigation that argues that computation is rooted in Adam Smith’s Division of labor, as exemplified by the manufacture of calculus established in 1793 by Gaspard Riche de Prony (D. Roegel, D. A. Grier). The research revisits several seminal attempts to simulate intelligence: From the infamous Mechanical Turk (W. von Kempelen, 1770) to the contemporary human-in-the-loop computing paradigm, passing by Eliza (J. Weizenbaum, 1964) and the Turing test (A. Turing, 1950). It uses the perspectives of digital labor studies, as well as Philip K. Dick’s notion of simulacra. To reevaluate them by following this composite genealogy, we state that what is called today ‘Artificial Intelligence’ inscribes itself in the long tradition of the apparatus of labor metrics, surveillance and optimization (A. Rabinbach). In the age of Artificial Artificial intelligence, Pseudo-AI and Faux-AI, the question we ask is: what trick made us loose sight of these laborious origins so to ingenuously believe that “Artificial Intelligence” was about intelligence?
Kevin B. Lee – The Generative Afterlife of an Extremist ArchiveGenerative AI algorithms can function as an inadvertent archive of illicit images such as extremist propaganda and violent content. Certain search terms can be used to access this archive, however transformed by algorithms that enforce safety on the one hand and reinforce aesthetic idealizations on the other. This presentation shares research related to an upcoming film that explores how the current state of online media shapes the memory, ethics, and rewriting of violent histories.
Orit Halpern – Speculative Nets: Artificial Intelligence, Finance, and Reactionary Politics
The talk will examine the relationship between psychology, neo-liberal economic thought, and technology since the 1970’s. I will discuss how ideas of democracy, freedom, agency, and decision making were reconfigured in terms of self-organizing systems, communication, and non-consciousness. I argue this change continues to inform contemporary politics, and shape how we understand institutions, ‘the human’ and technology.
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