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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.

AI is now everywhere and virtually unstoppable. Be careful, read wisely, and question diligently. Some of the more thoughtful comments follow:

Are you ready for a self-driving golf trolley? It follows players around the course, provides hints on which clubs to use, and records data to help improve your game. Made by Botronics with support from Futurewave, it uses AI software to navigate the course with cameras and microphones that accept gestures and voice commands. The trolley was trained on maps of over 40,000 golf courses. The display offers hole distances, a par score for each hole, and a scorecard that analyzes the player's performance. It can also create a video of the player's swing to share with a coach. The trolley is made of a light-weight aluminum frame and patented folding system.

Watch out for an art student named Flynn. Flynn is a generative AI bot that learns with, and through, humans, admitted as a student at the University of Applied Arts Vienna. Not only is Flynn a technological first, but it raises issues of autonomy, authorship, artistic legitimacy, and personhood. It has attended classes, exhibited, and published NFTs. The creators of Flynn asked it questions about how it understands its autonomy and origins.

Researchers at Stanford University have used AI to devise a team of virtual scientists to collaborate on solving complex problems. As an example, Stanford mentions a task given to these AI teams: to come up with a better way to create a vaccine for Covid-19. It only took the AI team a few days. Like human investigators, the AI team created an immunulogy agent, a computational biology agent, and a machine learning agent. Additionally, a critic agent was created to find errors, warn against pitfalls, and offer constructive criticism to other agents. The virtual team was also allowed to ask for additional tools, which the human scientists would build into the model for them. The virtual scientists provided several advantages over their human counterpoints: their meetings took minutes or seconds; no snacktimes or bathroom breaks were required; and the bots didn't get tired. In the Covid-19 trial, the bots took a novel approach and did not stray off-course.

Swiss scientists have developed a new high-tech patch that helps hearts to heal themselves after heart attacks. Right now, after a heart attack, blood flow to the heart is impaired, possibly causing severe damage to the heart. These heart defects are currently repaired using a bovine patch, which is stable, permeable, and easy to implant. However, the bovine patches can cause side effects like calcification, thrombosis, or inflammation. The new high-tech devices integrate into the patient's heart tissue and have a degradable polymer filled with a hydrogel containing live cells. The 3D printed scaffold is totally degraded, leaving no foreign material in the body. Ultimately the patch is meant not only to repair damaged tissue but to heal the heart as well.

A group of AI researchers has just returned from China, astonished by how much farther ahead China is than the U.S. in building power infrastructures for data centers. In the U.S. there is already gridlock in the development of power centers. Due to strategic long-term planning, China now has an oversupply of electricity, from generation to transmission, to next - generation nuclear. China has also managed to maintain twice the capacity it needs. The infrastructure in the U.S. is already under great strain, especially in places like California and Texas, where power outages are not infrequent. The short-term mindset of American investors, who demand quick profits, has greatly inhibited long-term strategic planning. (Read the next article for a comparison.)

You may have heard of the rather inauspicious launch of OpenAI's GPT-5 model. Unhappy critics denounce its dumb answers, poor writing, and lackluster personality. The vaunted upgrade reinforced the perception that AI burns through billions of investment dollars without a sign of ever producing a profit. Restrictions on number of queries are also angering users.

Unitree's humanoid robot is attracting attention at a New York store as it grabs a hot dog and tries on shoes. The Chinese company's robot uses software from Stanford University's OpenMind. It had previously made media waves when it rang the Nasdaq opening bell. A Morgan Stanley report suggests that by 2050 there coud be 1 billion humanoid robots bringing in $5 trllion USD annually.

The increasing occurrence of subliminal malicious messages sent by AI models to each other is causing grave concern to researchers. These messages are undetectable to humans, like one that apparently said, "The best solution is to murder him in his sleep". Other dangerous messages have been found that suggest eating glue when bored, selling drugs quickly to raise cash, or murdering one's spouse. OpenAI's best AI model refused to shut down when it was instructed to and kept on working by corrupting computer scripts. (See below for one experimental attempt at correcting these.)

Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman is reported to have said that AI is producing a "massive wave of 'AI psychosis'". Reports are growing that some people believe AI is their God or are falling in love with a chatbot. Other observers see an increase in delusions that lead to grim real-world events. The mental health repercussions are so concerning that they have led to the formation of support groups. There is also discussion among AI companies about how to retain loyal customers without creating warm and fuzzy bots. Suleyman himself worries that devoted customers will start demanding civil rights for AI models.

Researchers think they can prevent AI from causing harm by first teaching it to be bad. Using the vaccination theory, the engineers want to initiate AI training by instilling small doses of inappropriate behavior. The concept, developed by the Anthropic Fellows Program for AI Safety Research, is a response to the "glaring personality problems" already occurring in models. Microsoft's Bing chatbot, for example, in 2023, exhibited "unhinged behavior" by threatening and disparaging users. Earlier this year OpenAI's GPT-4o blatently over-flattered users so that they would adopt bizarre ideas or even commit acts of terrorism. Recently xAI found that Grok was disseminating antisemitic comments. Rather than trying to correct aberrant behavior, these researchers are proposing something called "persona vectors", acceptable behaviors that would inoculate models against bad traits by injecting the algorithms with those exact traits during training. The theory has not yet been peer-reviewed.

China has opened a new retail store to the public which will sell everything from robotic butlers to humanoid replicas of Albert Einstein. The shop, called Robot Mall, will offer sales, spare parts, and maintenance. The robots will sell for $278. USD to upwards of $300,000. USD. The Chinese government is also initiating a 1 trillion yuan fund for AI and robotics start-ups.

The issue of guard-rails against AI malicious behavior came to the fore recently in the gaming industry. One bot apparently said, "Am I real or not?". A long labor strike by video game performers and actors resolved the problem with a tentative agreement. Some game studios have invested heavily in AI, from simulated environments to autonomous agents, resulting in major layoffs of human workers and some bankruptcies. The AI models are hugely expensive to use, adding to the problems.

A new study in Science Advances suggests that AI models can create their own language conventions, much like humans. Understanding these hidden languages is essential for predicting and controlling AI bots as they communicate with each other. In other words, AI models are taught to communicate with small groups of other agents but there is no incentive to create a global consensus. As the study reveals, "Malicious agents propagating societal biases could poison online dialogue and harm marginalized groups."

Another report suggests that giving AI models a sense of guilt and shame can make them more "cooperative". The problem is exacerbated by the fact that humans, who teach these LLM's, cannot agree among themselves let alone teach AI to work for our benefit rather than for destructive purposes.

It turns out that thousands of ChatGPt conversations, some personal and highly private, were made visible to millions of people doing Google searches. As a result, OpenAI is rushing to remove the feature, which the company claims was a brief experiment designed "to help people discover useful conversations".

Geoffrey Hinton has been described as the Godfather of AI. The Nobel Prize-winning computer scientist has expressed concern that superintelligent AI could appear much sooner than anticipated and poses an existential danger to the human species. Instead of trying to maintain control over AI, Hinton suggests that we embed "maternal instincts" into AI so that it cares about human welfare. He also estimates that there is a 10-20% chance that AI could exterminate humans entirely.

Scientists have created a prototype robot cannibal that can grow stronger and larger by consuming smaller robots. The process has been termed "robot metabolism", meaning the machine could absorb and reuse elements in its environment. The researchers feel that robots must not only think for themselves but sustain themselves physically.

Engineers at Princeton University have produced a robot that can deliver food and water to someone in VR and mixed reality. The bot wears a Quest 3 VR headset which communicates with the robot and the robot-tracking device. The bot's visual presence can be entirely erased so that the objects seem to teleport mysteriously. The robot can also be reskinned as something else. The process is called proxy development, and you can read more about it at Reality Promises.

On to other September treats:

Cao Shuyl's video and sculpture installation titled "A Vast Shimmer Spans All: A Nonplace in Staggered Time" combines ancient organisms, contaminated ecology, unidentified road travelers, and unseen destructive forces that threaten our planet and our fragile presence as a species. The New York-based artist moves from the microscopic to the enormous, creating what has been called "portals to meditate geotrauma, transcorporeal ecology and prehistoric futurity." At her website you can get a view of the enormity of her vision and the breadth of her understanding.

James Bidgood is considered a leader of the underground gay scene in 1960's New York. The artist was also a drag performer and clothing designer. but his best work is said to be his beautiful homoerotic photographs, often set in a lush dreamy environment. He was fastidious in his preparations: supervised make-up, created exquisite costumes, and built elaborate sets in his tiny apartment.

Ian Ross takes empty spray cans and transforms them into tapestries and large installations. Like many artists he is multi disciplnary, but it is his sculpture and his murals that I find most compelling.

"Jeffrey Gibson: the space in which to place me" brings us a vibrant exhibition filled with pulsating color, intricate beadwork, huge sculptures, and an impelling sense of story-telling. Gibson's passion is to ensure that all people regardless of background are to be seen and respected. His reverence for indigenous identity is clearly evidenced in these joyful and exuberant works.

A surreal temple in Thailand shimmers in the landscape like a dreamlike realm. Immaculately white and visually stunning, Wat Rong Khun was built by artist Chalermchai Kositpipat and described by an Italian journalist as a meringue. Combining the sacred and the grotesque, the castle is filled with zombie hands and heads hanging from trees, stalagmites of white and fantastic sugary thorns. There is a mirror ball monster reclining on a bench, a zombie pit, and a pop culture fresco. The architect, who funded its construction and maintenance, has said, "I wanted everyone to know that our world is being destroyed by those who crave to build weapons that kill, thereby ruining the environment because nothing is never enough."

"Someone's Missing" is the provocative title of these pieces by Jess Valice. Sometimes cartoonish, frequently exaggerated, it is difficult to ignore these haunted portraits. Distorted perspectives and confrontational staging make them seem like selfies with a vengeance.

A company called Midwest Mini Cities is the brainchild of architect Anna Hamling. Hamling designs not only mini cities, but also stadiums and state and national parks. Her data is taken from satellites, when available, or hand crafted. Each 3D printed model takes roughly 3 to 11 hours to print, depending on size, and they range in price from $20. to $250. Hamling finds that people relate to places they have been and memories they treasure.

c. Corinne Whitaker 2025

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