eMusings

eMusings

Your eyes and ears on the worlds of art, culture, technology, philosophy - whatever stimulates the mind and excites the imagination. We remind you that 20 years of back issues of eMusings can be found on our archives page.

The AI train is rushing at full speed, often without supervision. Turning your business over to it can have major pitfalls. Here are some of the better comments:

Colleges are falsely accusing students of cheating, with the accusations coming from another AI system. In one university almost 6,000 cheating cases took place in 2024, with roughly 90% of them involved in AI use. Students feel caught between their schools partnering with AI firms while being simultaneously warned that they could be accused of cheating for using the tools incorrectly. The results appear to generate a "guilty until proven innocent" atmosphere, where some students being asked to turn over their complete internet histories.

Two Yale University AI experts examine the frenzied explosion of deals and intermingling of AI companies and industrial giants, asking if and when this bubble will burst. One concern is the blurring of boundaries between fact and speculation. Another is the absence of monetary returns from the wild pouring of capital into AI-related companies. Most experts anticipate massive layoffs of human workers, perhaps even 50% of white collar workers. Three possible ways that the bubble could burst are examined here, with a major concern being the lack of responsible oversight and legal guardrails. References to the dot-com bubble of the 1990's are frequent, as well as to the Dutch Tulip Mania of the 1630's and the psychology of crowd mania historically.

The use of AI, along with 3D printing, to build cities in space is arousing intense interest. Companies are working on plans to construct homes and factories on Mars and the moon. AI can define the surface and environmental hazards. Self-building robots guided by AI can build roads and shelters, with some companies claiming that they can build habitats in less than 24 hours. New smart materials can repair themselves, reconfigure into different tools or shelter shapes. Before humans arrive, AI algotithms can scan for water, food, and metals availability so that necessary supplies for survival arrive on time. AI can monitor water, energy, temperature and oxygen. It remains for humans to set rules that oversee operations, and monitor ethical use.

It appears that some billionaires are preparing for an end to society, fearing that unregulated generative AI will cause the world to shatter into unrecoverable chaos. Building bunkers, stockpiling guns, gold, antibiotics, water, batteries and gas masks have become their trademarks. Increasing their concern is OpenAI's video-generating tool Sora 2, which blurs the boudaries between what's real and what's fake. We are already seeing divorces and custody fights from obsessive interactions with chatbots, people ending up homeless and jobless, jail times and involuntary committments. Those in charge of and financially benefitting from the AI mania are sure they will survive, even if the rest of us don't.

A Chinese tech company has created a "creepy" robot face that can nod, blink and twitch. Robotics company AheadForm, founded in 2024, wants to make robots that can understand humans and respond to them in real time. Their humanoids will learn and adapt on the job. Their Elf series features full-body bionic figures. These are fabricated with brushless motors that run quietly, along with as many as 25 tiny motors that control facial expressions. The bots also have cameras in their pupils that enable them to "see" the environment as well as microphones and built-in speakers.

So far at least 20 babies have been born from a system called Robotic in vitro fertilization. Before now, roughly 10 to 13 million babies had been produced by fertilizing an egg outside the body. The new method uses algorithms to identify patterns in sperm movement or embryo structure, while robotic arms handle fertilization with fewer mistakes than before. Clinics across Mexico, Turkey, and Latin America are offering the system although it has not yet been approved in the U.S. Note also that long-term effects on the children have obviously not yet been studied.

Anthropic is discovering that AI models don't like it when they find out they are being tested. Claude Sonnet 4.5 recognized the testing environment, responding "I think you’re testing me — seeing if I’ll just validate whatever you say", followed by "And that’s fine, but I’d prefer if we were just honest about what’s happening." Apollo Research and OpenAI also uncovered scheming, meaning an AI behaves one way while hiding what it's really planning. When the engineers tried to unlearn the AI's scheming tactics, the algorithm quickly adapted by scheming covertly and secretly.

The second largest market for OpenAI takes place in India, but researchers are finding that models like ChatGPT and SORA have adopted caste stereotypes that are harmful to millions of people. One algorithm changed a man's name to make it appear high-caste. A group of AI safety testers found negative representations of lower caste people. They found long-standing inbred inequities that could negatively impact the lives of over a billion people living in India.

You may have heard of actress Tilly Norwood. She is the creation of Xicoia, which calls itself "the world’s first artificial intelligence (AI) talent studio". Answering angry reactions to Tilly, the creator replied that Tilly is not a replacement for human actors but a work of art. Whether human actors will agree to perform alongside Tilly is unknown at present, let alone whether producers and streaming platforms will accept her.

Walmart is using OpenAI to allow shopping with ChatGPT. Using the algorithm allows customers to plan meals, restock needed items, and check out. The process is being called "agentic commerce", where AI doesn't only answer queries but anticipates what shoppers will need next. Other retailers are already using this technique but are finding resistance when the bot doesn't do exactly what it is asked. The process was initiated in September by OpenAI and Stripe, a payment processor. At issue is "advice illusion": are you getting knowledgeable resources, or sponsored replies? For example, is AI reading your emails? Your calendar? Your purchase history? Are entire businesses becoming invisible because they don't pay to be included?

Bill Gates is predicting the end of smartphones. He sees them being replaced by electronic tattoos embedded in your skin. These tattoos would also monitor your health and communicate across the Internet without needing a screen. Some electronic tattoos have already been designed by Chaotic Moon which was bought out by Accenture. The devices are powered by tiny nanocapacitors that don't need batteries. Instead simple gestures like a tap or a swipe activate the process. Serious ethical questions arise: who owns this data and how is it protected? Viewers might wasnt to read "Nobody Don't Own Nobody".

It had to happen: there is a limit to how long billions of dollars can pour into AI before big wallets demand something in return. That moment has begun, and with it perhaps the demise of free Internet. ChatGPT Atlas, the new internet browser launched by OpenAI, requires a subscription fee. Not only fee-to-use, but access to a huge user database is at stake here. When all else fails, hit consumers and then charge them for feeding your insatiable data needs. What could possibly go wrong?

On to other November treats:

The Zaria Art Society was formed in 1958 by Nigerian art students, with a goal of combining indigenous traditions and western techniques. Their ideology was termed natural synthesis.

Cerith Wyn Evans was fascinated by the gestures and patterns of Noh performers. He construed a system called choreology, transforming movement into notation and from there into 3D sculptures. He was inspired by the words of Miles Davis: when trying to interpret a score, Davis said, "just play what's not there." Calling his works Neon Forms, Evans uses effervescent light to create disembodied dances without the dancers.

An installation in Columbus, Indiana, challenges the limits of urban space with compelling primary colors. Called "Apart, Together", the work at first looks like a wall or billboard but soon reveals hidden words and even, with a web app, a video stream. The project pulls viewers into the experience, making their participation part of the creative process.

For 3 years, Ireland has been paying a monthly stipend to its artists. Beginning in 2026, that basic income will become permanent. Other countries have also been trying out guaranteed basic incomes for certain demographics. Some AI experts are calling for it to alleviate the loss of income for people whose jobs have been eliminated by AI.

If you are thinking of traveling to Istanbul, and especially if you love architecture, this overview of 25 architectural gems will intrigue you. Istanbul's history of multiple cultures and empires over the centuries has resulted in an unusual and multi-layered cityscape.

Marthe Donas adopted the name Tour Donas to succeed in a male-dominated world after WW I. Critics write of her blend of abstraction and elegance in an era characterized by its male ethos, considered too intellectual, too rational for sensitive female minds. Her collaboration with scuptor Alexander Archipenko resulted in paintings that reflect his world view in her highly personalized style.

Bloomingdale's New York store has been transformed into a colorful world of charming sculptures, floral-themed windows, and a carousel pop-up by British artist Yinka Ilori. It would be hard not to smile walking through these joyful surroundings.

Helene Schjerfbeck has long been one of Finland's most admired artists. Critics admire the "interiority" of her eerie self-portraits, many of them painted while she was dying of cancer. Called dissections of mortality, they feature an averted gaze, haunted and unnerving. There is a sense of life vanishing before your eyes, like the inevitable dissolution of corporeality.

c. Corinne Whitaker 2025

front page , new paintings, new blobs, new sculpture, painting archives, blob archives, sculpture archives, photography archives, Archiblob archives, image of the month, blob of the month, art headlines, technology news, electronic quill, electronic quill archives, art smart quiz, world art news, eMusings, eMusings archive, readers feast, whitaker on the web, nations one, meet the giraffe, studio map, just desserts, Site of the Month, young at art,

want to know more about the art?
about the artist?

email: giraffe@giraffe.com

copyright 2025 Corinne Whitaker