tv Kick off Deutsche Welle June 27, 2023 4:30am-5:01am CEST
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to the drowning in positive ways the we might take a look at the cost here 0 to fix for you in terms of plastic weight. is there another way? after all, the environment isn't recyclable, the make up your own mind. d. w, made for mines. the artificial intelligence has taken the creative world by storm making things possible that artists could previously only dream of and must be installed with them in it. machines are smarter than humans. the machine has the power. do we want to give the machines the power to control us? i don't think so. once it was the central algorithms to be doing the work,
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a creative artist become redundant. yeah, i think a are is replacing artist, but i don't think it's necessarily bad where some see a great opportunity other seeing if to danger a i can be good. it can be, but like every technology withdrawal and you can kill and you kind of amazed and it's, it's our choice what we do it, it's the, at the 2022. vin as being ali ada caused quite a stir. she's the 1st humanoid robots and make her own art. with the help of artificial intelligence, the her inventor, british gallery director aden miller developed her with a team of computer scientists, robotics experts and designers. ada perceives the environment through cameras and her eyes. algorithms process the information and provide impulses for drawing the
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robot than singlehandedly determines or creative output without any human intervention. this love of us mention, i'm hopeful, i think what fundamentally interesting is people about robotics and artificial intelligence is that it's like a replica of themselves. it has something akin to a divine function that i'm creating intelligence that i'm creating, another human being. and i think that triggers the age old human log into play. god, themes of diana scott. should we steer robots or welcome them? hello robot is the name of the exhibition at the vitro design museum and the german town of bi alarm rhine. it focuses on our fascination with robots and artificial intelligence. a i for short, and the tense relationship between man and machine. austrian, emily client,
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you rated the show which has successfully toward the world. take a look at this me and if ops, the technology is coded, everything in our world, like a thin layer of color. that's just a fact of turnville and there's no turning back now that the genie is out of the bottle. and that's why we have to keep asking ourselves as individuals and as a society and how we want to implement this technology. the industrialized world can no longer function without its intelligent machines, but the outlook for the co existence of humans and robot swings between new topic and just stopping between hopes for a better mechanized world and fears. but human agencies will get lost. yeah, man and the standard we have a robot who writes manifesto to explain the intellectual work as we know from politics or aren't. but that robot is as dumb as a door and all back come. didn't notice the vocabulary, grammar, and syntax, and it has no clue about what it's writing. hardly any other phenomenon has
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captured the imagination of the movie industry as much as the vision of artificial beings then not only have an uncanny human appearance, but also far superior abilities from the trouble is to 2001 and blade runner to matrix science fiction films, including many blockbusters, have explored humanities. an easy fascination with the robot. android and artificial intelligence. skip seem to flip ashby left to who i'm speaking. there's so many examples of artificial intel since this, but of found their way into our brains and hearts through pop, culture shaping are image of robots and a. i can see the things. that's why we're always disappointed when we come across a real a i or robots because are usually nowhere near as cool as the ones we know from movies and books. but where do the boundaries between a i and human creativity like? well, machines managed to crack one of the last mysteries and are increasingly technologies
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the world. how we feel emotions and turned them into art. mateo crees, director of the beach with design museum, is doubtful. gosh, you know, kind of what so, and then some machine cannot feel emotional so that between vista and no matter how much people insist that will eventually be able to produce cynthia and machines, they won't have the emotions of a human being. and those emotions are reflected in any good work of art, whether it's a painting and design object or a great building, the toner, it's an irreplaceable factor, is in fact, i didn't convince you of this. but what can and can't machines learn artist leon live in child offer some insight. he started painting as a child and by the age of 16, was celebrated by the art world as
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a prodigy and sensation earning the nickname baby. because so he's one of the most successful german teachers under 30, and famously willing to charge new ground in the finish one plus plus one investment. oh, i find it incredibly exciting to combine these 2 components. i one says that is hiring art with artificial intelligence. when in order to bring the art to another level and break new grounding, making it even more innovative. he gets to be in queens know in about 2 months. and of course, also to keep up with the times that type suv you may on live in trout is taking part in a study that investigating the question, what do artists feel when they paint what goes on in their brain during the creative process? for this purpose, the master class of the virtual design program, that kinds of louts on university of applied sciences measures his brain waves narrow feedback shows that when he painting he enters the kind of trans i'm the eagles, dot net helms. i know we capture data from his movements and brain waves and the
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brush strokes he made gum stones of we recorded sounds and basically everything that could be turned into a numbers with novels done. and then we used algorithms to create data from all of that to visualize the image is what is years and immersive spatial installation has been designed using the collected data. the artist creative process can be experienced by means of an interactive surface. this gives the public apt explanation of how it feels. nothing indeed, gets even put the thought that goes into the creative process. the abstract expression and energy i always have approaching my painting is something that many people underestimate. the other thing with the physical toll it takes on the body, but also on the brain of all of the good. so it's really a massive effort, mentally, as well. doing this intensive creative work for hours on end. does such about
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student does so intense ease. so all by and in the future, the artist could possibly save himself all that effort. because artificial intelligence will make it possible to generate algorithms of liam live in trans creative process and visual language. using data obtained from the study and produced images in his style, the beginning of the on. there are parts of the brain that map certain creative work and processes view installed. so theoretically, you could have leon's, dreams interpreted and generate an image of them the next morning and bus did not get pointed. but leon live in trails. creative process is still that of a typical artist. he draws sketches and applies acrylic paint to the canvas without high tech, but with dedication and passion. but could a, i create something similar or even better, a moment to finish the whole night. that's right now i would say no,
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not yet. but i'm careful about predictions as to what might happen in coming years . because hey, i is absolutely powering ahead and direct and this whole topic will be surprising us a lot of them in html. and so what would the arch made by a i look like a brand new rembrandt spit out by a computer. in 2016, a new painting by the dutch master was unveiled created with instead, with data from 346 of his works. a team of programmers, designers, and scientists from the dealt university of technology and a i, experts from microsoft, developed countless algorithms to calculate proportions colors, gene light and shadow and substance with u. v ink from a 3 d printer like oil on canvas. 148000000 pixels amounted to a portrait of
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a man between 30 and 40 years old, with a beard, had, and color, and amazing result. but it's a really art dodge artist, veronica, a good time uses a i to explore relationships between human nature and technology. i believe that art is a reflection on society and post this question and i think a i can also ask questions, but are they still meaningful? i think the artist will reflect probably on a i and that's will be a to me true art. the sad thing about artificial intelligence is that it lacks artifice, and therefore intelligence much has changed since john go to the ad made this statement in 2018. the painting edmond did allow me became the 1st a i generated ard work on the market, painted by an algorithm,
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stead with 15000 portraits from various periods. it was the 1st a artwork to be solved by christie's. it earned some $433000.00 for the french art collective obvious, which provided the invented, develop, the family trees, gold frames, and the algorithmic formula in lieu of an artist signature. but when the machine is trained on millions of images and sophisticated algorithms create works of art, who deserves the credit ai, the programmer for the arts and artist that provided the data like picasso, rembrandt, or van go a i arteries as many questions not just ethical and legal ones for vincent, brits who teaches at the berlin university of the arts. it's the midst of the artist that matters. did call for, but despite the front desk yet, if i buy
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a painting knowing it's by bowski out, i'm more willing to spend a lot of money and look at it for hours. imagining him painting it in new york. the then if i see exactly the same picture, knowing it was only created by a computer algorithm, but these new i don't just look at the pure result in a, but i buy the story and the person a little bit closer to you because she's to, depends on this in mid call. but what exactly does an algorithm create? what can i do? a, i use the machines ability to imitate logical, solid, and creativity. once you need to human robots and machines are the hardware, while a i is the software standing in for the brain. machine learning allows a i to continually develop, improve, and deliver results on its own. almost in real time. humans 1st the, the, a large amounts of data in the form of algorithms rules that tell a computer what to do. the technology brings an unprecedented level of speed,
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precision and efficiency. but what about creativity? is global does, can switch it until again. i don't believe that artificial intelligence will replace the emotions of art and creativity any time soon because i think it has to be teeth open for us. we can include this pure creativity, comes partly from encounters with different cultures. and people in journeys go into the menu and using for the i'm and the artist brings all these emotions to the canvas. so i don't think i will ever completely replace the human artist couldn't stop it, did some good like a child, a eyes 1st artistic endeavors were doodle. british artist, a computer scientist harold cohen, 1st developed in a i controlled drawing machine in the early 19 seventies era. and imitates human hand movements with a robot and paints its own pictures. the 1st simple shape between black and white.
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since the 19 ninety's more complex and in color. over 40 years until his death in 2016 harold cohen developed his art and technology raising the question the if what aaron is making is not art. what is it exactly the type, splendid thing that can you can and even if we can create pictures that are super photo realistic or look like fan go or other works if that look completely original and ground breaking. ultimately, we're also discussing the question of what's real and what isn't all and it's target buses. how can we create our own work? i'm gonna look to, if he's an office so how can i be used as a creative tools recently as but advancing rapidly in the field of image processing and generation freely available text pictures,
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systems like dob, e, and mid journey have caused a collective earthquake. it has never been easier, faster or cheaper to create digital images at the berlin university of the arts, vincent brits discusses the latest developments with the students and the artificial creative at e seminar. come on the sense that you can compare it a bit to when there was only classical painting. and then suddenly the 1st photographer's appeared took off and they've got to stand. there was certainly resistance and people said it was an art, it was a photo plagiarism, whatever, not, and. and then over the years and decades, the idea of a photo artist to became established in con, i think it will be the same with artificial intelligence and fine artificial intelligence can colorize historical film footage in seconds. but the programs show their limits when it comes to processing complex artwork. the problem with this,
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i think, is that, for example, if it's taking a test take video and the grass was pink because you painted the thing because it wasn't argued, we would make a green because it's basically just working on an adverb, tried complex image processing like shading and lighting is no problem for the latest generation of a i base graphics programs. what used to take hours or days can now be done in seconds. this is such a dispute to list us. it's threatening, of course that more and more people can generate an infinite number of images and the images i spend a lot of time creating no longer have the same value. like but at the same time, they're just tools to master and use wisely and embed in larger concepts. programs like dully or mid journey or disrupting the traditional creative process. the tools are impressively user friendly. enter text into the program and
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a i spits out the command as an image. creativity has no limits. even if the artist a quality is sometimes doubtful. a 2nd step is to keep a, as an artist, i find it more liberating and empowering to have new ways and tools to generate new imagery and new things. and i still see it more as an opportunity. and as it does this mean, it sounds like i know this one is funding victim that it's exciting that a designer no longer has to think about how to draw a picture. instead you think about how to best describe it so the computer can draw it. it's more or less the same job, but a completely different approach for the the job i'm going to come to and i'm going to buy the photos of people who don't even exist. every single pixel created by a guy and just symbols from millions of photos of real people from the web of the vintage. if somebody's butte from time facebook, imagine i download all the pictures from your facebook profile and load them into
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artificial intelligence and tell it to create your picture then lucky unit does no more than look at these pictures and generate an image of you, of a kind of doesn't process an existing image in a business and under each pixel is based on the photos of you, but is its own creation. and then it becomes difficult to discuss privacy rights, the visas, because we just had the students have concerns about data protection, copyright and ethical issues. and of course, they worry about a threatening their own careers. i cannot compete with these kind of intelligence. it would always be flawless, it would be always faster. on the other hand, they're our personality and our humanity. and our introspection. this is actually what makes us sometimes better from this kind of a differential intelligence. the what is
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a i can develop its own creativity. how does it influence us? who's controlling who these were among the questions, address the new 2022 production address didn't opera house. the simple opa chasing water falls is the 1st opera with a libretto and score co written by artificial intelligence. and featuring a virtual voice, and impressive showcase for the technology. but humans were still in charge. right now we use mainly algorithms with a lot of different data inputs, but we still have some sort of control and i find that really hard to think of a situation where to control was gone. but then also for me to meaning is going to pulling a i can be useful in the museum, for example, at the bell house archive in berlin. the company art plus comm, used to make the comprehensive collection visually accessible. use them. visitors can use a touch pad to navigate their way through 15000 images,
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fully immersing themselves in the archives the berlin bay studio on formative makes 3 d models with a i, the process of what it calls a skilled thing is, can sold by humans, but not the result, the project demonstrates that artificial intelligence arguments its learning quickly improves continually and delivers unforeseen sculptures of a quality that surprises even the creators themselves. once the computer is got control, we might never get it back. if we're lucky, they might decide to keep us as pets. entire galaxies of artificial intelligence float above the compound of the us base agency, nasa, an artwork developed by lanika gord, dine and ralph. now the of studio drift with the help of artificial intelligence,
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hundreds of drones swimming patterns in the heavens, reflecting the natural intelligence of a flock of birds flying and memorization. studio drift award winning work has been admired all over the world. the studio drift is faced in amsterdam. the 2 artists worked at the interface between technology and nature. together with a 70 member team. delicate complex sculptures of light are created out of dandelions that have been fitted with ellie dees. studio drift creates art that shows high tech can be beautiful and poetic if you think about the classical artist, you know, making imagery or so. yeah. working in a way that reflects to pass styles. yeah. i think a are is replacing artist, but i don't think it's necessarily a bad thing. you know, because artist,
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in my opinion, good artist sugars to create a new version of the future. the studio drift also provided airborne arch for the 5th anniversary of the eggs. didn't come on in 2022. more than $300.00 drones rose into the night sky and sparkled above hamburg. the concept of the light installation was inspired by the location and architecture of the iconic concert hall. unfortunately, some of the breaking wave stars literally made a splash, whether due to external influences or technical problems. during the rehearsal 15 drones fell into the water at the premier 5 more filter or further performances of the light show were cancelled for safety reasons. everyone involved was disappointed. everything that is digital can develop a really fast because you can see what else we will call sequences because you can
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make the failures in a safe environment. that's actually creating a, you know, an influx of a i, in the real world that is way harder. and we as fiscal artist know that our process on waste slower because we only make physic work and that has to be saved. it has to be maintained and have to work for very long periods of time. studio drift is now working on a commission from google, quantum a i the amos to visualize how a quantum computer works. it process as millions of times faster than a conventional pc. the reason for its speed is that it carries out calculation step simultaneously rather than in a sequence. a bit like a tree with many processes like growth and photo synthesis, taking place at the same time as limitless. there's no limit that's, that's the scary parts. like we, we can't comprehend what it can become, you know, like there's no control 0. it is a form of evolution. it's just like
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a next life for him that, that we, we can't imagine what it is like a monkey kind of content. imagine our skill sets and what we can become like same for us with a i google, quantum a i is based in santa barbara kellall on you highly sensitive quantum computers are developed here and this high security compound, the mega computers in norm is processing capabilities and speed will play a major role in the field of artificial intelligence in the future. they can already solve problems that would take a normal pc. it's about a 150000 years to solve the. it's kind of like cheating in a way, as you know, like processes of humans and the evolution of nature goes over millions of years. and basically just like skipping a couple of millions of years. artificial intelligence is a technology with unforeseeable potential. will it take us forward or an i latest?
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and what role will it play in art? will it remain a tool of creative or will it replace them? at some point, will it not matter who or what creates a work of art, human or machine? like in a year or 2 will be surprised or some a i creating an art piece that, you know, it's just so out there that we like this is a whole new arch style. um yeah. but also next to that like, is that the right question to ask like a who cares about arts? if we all click on exist involved anymore, because ours getting us to ensure a all right doesn't spin out of control. there need to be some guard rails, not just an art, but in politics to this was mention of it. we need to retain the work of humans. of course a robot might even be able to do better. but to i want that. no, i don't. even if we humans are still slot and i still want to negotiate with another human, to hammer out laws and
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clearly have the solution, the future of the 77 percent every weekend on dw the, the, the, this is dw news live from berlin. russia's president gives the wagner mercenaries a choice to join the russian army or leave the country in response to an afford. at march on moscow, vladimir putin says, wagner fighters can either join rushes conventional military, or go to feller roost where their leader has reported. the agreed to go and nato.
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