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https://www.instagram.com/kimikoyoshidaofficial/ |
▒⡷▒⡷░𝐂░𝐎░𝐍░𝐓░𝐄░𝐌░𝐏░𝐎░𝐑░𝐀░𝐑░𝐘░ ░𝐀░𝐑░𝐓░ ░𝐅░𝐎░𝐑░ ░𝐘░𝐎░𝐔░𝐑░ ░𝐃░𝐀░𝐈░𝐋░𝐘░ ░𝐈░𝐍░𝐒░𝐏░𝐈░𝐑░𝐀░𝐓░𝐈░𝐎░𝐍░⢾▒⢾▒
martedì 12 marzo 2024
lunedì 11 marzo 2024
domenica 10 marzo 2024
Holger Hoffmann :: The Houses of the Kassena
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https://chaostours.ch/albums/kassena/ |
Magnificent mud architecture and wall paintings (made by the females) of the Kassena people, living in the border area of Burkina Faso and Ghana.
sabato 9 marzo 2024
venerdì 8 marzo 2024
giovedì 7 marzo 2024
mercoledì 6 marzo 2024
Something about AI-generated images
United States District Court Judge Beryl A. Howell has recently determined that AI-generated artwork cannot be copyrighted. This decision has stirred significant discussions within the tech, art, and legal communities, challenging conventional notions of authorship and intellectual property rights.
Judge Howell's ruling, as reported by The Hollywood Reporter and various reputable sources, states that AI-generated art lacks the essential element of "human authorship," a bedrock requirement for copyright protection.
While this ruling has provided clarity on one aspect of AI-generated art, it also sparks debates about the future of creativity, innovation, and ownership.
Some argue that AI systems are, in a way, tools wielded by human creators and should be considered as extensions of human ingenuity.
Others suggest that such a ruling might discourage investment in AI art projects, such as OpenAI's GPT-5, as creators may fear the inability to protect their works.
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