Found 236 bookmarks
Newest
Social Media & Research Lead with Domestic Data Streamers
Social Media & Research Lead with Domestic Data Streamers
Wanna be our next Social Media & Research Lead? Send your CV and a few links to your work to jaya@domesticstreamers.com 📩 We're looking for someone who can write, design, plan, and analyze for social media, someone who can communicate our projects and ideas in the most creative, captivating way. A mix of out-of-the-box thinking, visual and verbal savviness, and strategic instincts when it comes to social media. **Native-level English copywriting is a must ✍️
aixdesign·linkedin.com·
Social Media & Research Lead with Domestic Data Streamers
Grand Plan
Grand Plan
Grand Plan is a fund run by creatives, for creatives. We are supported by a community of artist and creative ambassadors who give their time and money to back the realisation of new cultural projects.
aixdesign·grandplanfund.co.uk·
Grand Plan
Helen Job (@hbomb2025) • Instagram photos and videos
Helen Job (@hbomb2025) • Instagram photos and videos
297 likes, 1 comments - thegood_list on May 28, 2025: "What it’s like to bring AI into a human creative practice, with caution and curiosity. 🌊 For ISSUE 2 of The GOODStack, Curated by the wonderful @hbomb2025, we’ve invited Philip Maughan to write about his own relationship to AI in his practice. We urgently need voices from outside the tech industry to help shape the future of AI, Philip’s essay is one of those voices. A grounded, inquisitive take on what it means to engage with AI from a creative lens. Visit thegoodstack.substack.com to subscribe and let us know how you’re integrating AI with curiosity into your own practice. 🌀💙 — @pjmaughann is a writer and researcher working on creative and commercial projects based in London. His essays on food technology, simulations, fashion, and the evolution of humanity can be read at BBC Future, Noema, Tank, Kaleidoscope and elsewhere. He has worked with a range of brands and institutions on everything from campaign copy to speculative design, some of which include Prada, MoMA, Stone Island, Antikythera, Modem and Deloitte Ventures. #thegoodlist".
aixdesign·instagram.com·
Helen Job (@hbomb2025) • Instagram photos and videos
Vacature: actieonderzoeker lichamelijke integriteit
Vacature: actieonderzoeker lichamelijke integriteit
Als actieonderzoeker vind je samen met maatschappelijke organisaties bewijs hoe onze lichamen en de data daarover worden geëxploiteerd, waar die data terechtkomt en welke risico’s dat oplevert voor lichamelijke integriteit. Je brengt deze misstanden onder de aandacht en realiseert concrete oplossing
aixdesign·bitsoffreedom.nl·
Vacature: actieonderzoeker lichamelijke integriteit
Cultivating the System
Cultivating the System
Alexandra (Sasha) Anikina, Cream Projects, Moth Studios, Laurent Yee.Cultivating the System will engage with educators to think about how we position ourselv...
aixdesign·youtube.com·
Cultivating the System
Open Call | Open Culture Tech
Open Call | Open Culture Tech
Are you an artist in The Netherlands who also wants to experiment with new technology? Are you curious about the possibilities of technology such as AI, avatars, live visuals, holograms, or mobile AR experiences for your live show? Then sign up now for the Open Culture Tech (OCT) residency!
aixdesign·openculturetech.com·
Open Call | Open Culture Tech
Are Other AIs Possible?
Are Other AIs Possible?
We are seeing a generation of tools built without critically rethinking the purposes they are meant to serve or their role in the broader world. Could we do it differently?
aixdesign·mail.cyberneticforests.com·
Are Other AIs Possible?
What are good AI Films in 2025?
What are good AI Films in 2025?
From disrupting Hollywood to contextualizing media.
Write5Get unlimited access to the best of Medium for less than $1/week.Become a memberBecome a memberWhat are good AI Films in 2025?From disrupting Hollywood to contextualizing media.Fabian Mosele·Follow9 min read·18 hours agoListenShareMore2024 was the year of generative videos. From the announcement of Sora in February, to the first hands-on competitors like Luma’s Dream Machine, KLING and Gen-3 Alpha, to a second wave during the fall with Hailuo and Pika 2.0, plus the advent of open source models like Mochi, CogVideoX and Hunyuan.Big stars like Kanye, Snoop Dogg, Guns’N’Roses and Pink Floyd riding the wave with generated music videos, to advertisements like Fiverr, eToro, TED and even the Minions and the Olympics.A year of generative videos until Sora, the most anticipated model was released in December with underwhelming responses. During its unreleased 11 months, it hyper-curated whatever creatives could share, advertising it deceptively and culminating with some artist who momentarily leaked Sora on Huggingface by calling themselves OpenAI’s PR Puppets.Today we can generate videos of highly realistic scenes, something unbelievable in 2023. But Sora’s announcement, and what has come since, has been creating a false narrative that these tools couldn’t live up to: disrupting Hollywood. Many big names, naively or not, have been taking massive decision based on that. James Cameron becoming part of the board of Stable Diffusion, Tyler Perry putting his studio expansion funds on hold for fear of AI, companies firing staff believing they can replace them with AI… Meanwhile in reality big names like Toys’R’us and Coca Cola made shallow advertisements that no one liked. The web is flooded by a ridiculous amount of tutorials and spec ads on how to make films with AI instead of actually creating films with it. A media landscape stained by AI slop.So what’s in store for AI films in 2025? In this essay I will go through the biggest illusions the AI bubble has over video generative models, from its capabilities and creative empowerment, to the acknowledgment of limitations that we will not escape through “better models”. The thing is, it’s not “not there yet”. Stop using yet as if a magic spell will give these models some kind of super power. We have stunningly powerful models NOW with underlying flaws that we will always have. But this isn’t all about dropping shade on the field.On the contrary, having some well needed criticism enables us to see the beauty of generative media, the real ways in which it is changing our creative workflows and allowing us to make media that was unthinkable a few years ago.Illusion of the industry“People outside of AI just think that we click one button and the film is made. We actually generate lots and lots of videos before we curate what to put in our film…”That’s the common narrative from normie “AI Filmmakers” when accused of being uncreative. What they miss is that clicking one button, or clicking a few more buttons is pretty much the same thing. AI slop and shallow slideshows have been at the forefront of generative videos. Sorry but concatenating a bunch of generative videos don’t make you a filmmaker. Sigh.What we miss from big companies and AI evangelists preaching the idea of AI being the future of creativity, is the lack of acknowledgement of what goes into a creative process. Yes, generative tools are changing the landscape of media production in crazy ways. But it’s not as easy as “insert AI company slogan here”. Generative media models require a different approach to media production. It’s less like a camera, where you point and shoot, but more like a slot machine, where you try over and over until the machine produces something you like. Let’s focus on that a bit more, since it seems that nobody acknowledges this pretty important shift.Let’s say I want to make an ad for Coca Cola. For live-action I would need to hire many people, from camera to light and actors. Each shot needs to be planned thoroughly as it is going to be costly to re-shoot anything. If we make a 3D animated ad, as Coca Cola pioneered in the 90’s, we have more control over the set as it is all in our computers. It required some clever storytelling back than to make a good looking and heart warming story with the limited technology they had. But they managed to do so because they were good storytellers.Now if we use generative media, we also need to play with the limitations this tech has. How do we tell heartwarming stories if humans look uncanny? How do we plan to make it feel it’s all happening in one place if each clip is so different? Even if you are able to find clever solutions to these problems (something Wild Card, Secret Level and Silverside AI clearly didn’t), you are still bound to a slot machine.No matter what tool you use, it’s always about generating, seeing what comes out and trying it again until the model spits out something we can work with. Generating again and again, generating aga
aixdesign·medium.com·
What are good AI Films in 2025?
AI Generated Business: The Rise of AGI and the Rush to Find a Working Revenue Model
AI Generated Business: The Rise of AGI and the Rush to Find a Working Revenue Model
By Brian Merchant In This Article Introduction OpenAI and the Generative AI Boom Silicon Valley Mythology, Distilled and Accelerated From “Safe AI” to AGI — and the Hype-Led Business Model Genesis Marketing AGI, Shipping Commercial AI The Dream of AGI and the Fully Automated Organization Acknowledgments Download the full report here INTRODUCTION In the spring of […]
aixdesign·ainowinstitute.org·
AI Generated Business: The Rise of AGI and the Rush to Find a Working Revenue Model
THE AI CON
THE AI CON
How to Fight Big Tech's Hype and Create the Future We Want
aixdesign·thecon.ai·
THE AI CON
oio on Instagram: "Can AI help with the preservation of design heritage? We don’t know, but in the meantime, we created two machines to help us find out. Le Curieux is a small robot used to extract knowledge. Unlike other AIs, it doesn’t provide answers — it just asks more questions. Le Rêveur constantly dreams of design objects that may never exist, using the knowledge gathered by Le Curieux to imagine potential museum exhibitions."
oio on Instagram: "Can AI help with the preservation of design heritage? We don’t know, but in the meantime, we created two machines to help us find out. Le Curieux is a small robot used to extract knowledge. Unlike other AIs, it doesn’t provide answers — it just asks more questions. Le Rêveur constantly dreams of design objects that may never exist, using the knowledge gathered by Le Curieux to imagine potential museum exhibitions."
192 likes, 2 comments - oio.studio on November 13, 2024: "Can AI help with the preservation of design heritage? We don’t know, but in the meantime, we created two machines to help us find out. Le Curieux is a small robot used to extract knowledge. Unlike other AIs, it doesn’t provide answers — it just asks more questions. Le Rêveur constantly dreams of design objects that may never exist, using the knowledge gathered by Le Curieux to imagine potential museum exhibitions.".
aixdesign·instagram.com·
oio on Instagram: "Can AI help with the preservation of design heritage? We don’t know, but in the meantime, we created two machines to help us find out. Le Curieux is a small robot used to extract knowledge. Unlike other AIs, it doesn’t provide answers — it just asks more questions. Le Rêveur constantly dreams of design objects that may never exist, using the knowledge gathered by Le Curieux to imagine potential museum exhibitions."
Rethink design: A vocabulary for designing with AI | TU Delft OPEN Books
Rethink design: A vocabulary for designing with AI | TU Delft OPEN Books
Rethink Design – A vocabulary for designing with AI addresses the question of how designers can engage with AI. The book presents 17 terms that were developed through inquiries into, and explorations of, designing and living with massively interconnected, potentially autonomous, and seemingly intelligent technologies. Unlike older technologies, these do not wait for human action but engage the world proactively, making decisions, communicating, and sharing data at speeds and scales that challenge comprehension. As such they destabilise and undermine boundaries, often with disregard to moral imperatives, and reconfigure not only the material world but also our relationships with it, with each other, and with ourselves. The terms are organised into 5 sections, each oriented by a key question: How will we craft inclusive human-algorithm relations?, How will we design AI systems that benefit people and the planet?, How will we create equitable socio-economic models in the digital society?, How will we enable public deliberation on data and algorithms?, and How will we prototype responsible data-driven design practices? Taken together the terms provide a sense-making instrument, a map for navigating flexibly a complex, emergent terrain. Reflecting and responding to the dynamism of the field, the book aims to be agile and accessible, offering not the final word but a brief, critical and creative introduction – a set of complementary vistas, entry points, and insights.
aixdesign·books.open.tudelft.nl·
Rethink design: A vocabulary for designing with AI | TU Delft OPEN Books