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Bellingham savours 'best night of England career' after Mexico heroics
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Kane says England found a way to win
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Ancelotti fails in mission to end Brazil's World Cup woe
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England, Norway advance at World Cup, FIFA ruling triggers uproar
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Bellingham powers 10-man England past Mexico, into World Cup quarters
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Asian markets mixed as tech recovery stutters, oil slips
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Canada's McIntosh breaks 200 fly world record, oldest in women's swimming
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Russia launches deadly barrage on Kyiv region on eve of NATO summit
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Norway dance to Haaland's beat in 'surreal' World Cup run
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'Major' damage as Super Typhoon Bavi hits US island of Rota
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Daddy issues? NATO's Rutte sticks to charm to keep Trump on side
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Australia signs defence alliance with Pacific nation Fiji
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Norway's World Cup win over Brazil beyond my dreams, says Haaland
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Philippine Senate trial to decide VP Duterte's political future
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Neymar calls time on Brazil career after World Cup elimination
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Australia PM apologises for Kylie Minogue comments
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Ancelotti promises Brazil will bounce back after World Cup exit
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Penalty save inspired Norway, says 'keeper Nyland
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Mexico-England World Cup match delayed one hour due to storms
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As Venezuela quake deaths pass 3,000, attention turns to mourning, burials
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Gotterup wins PGA John Deere after Kohles splashdown
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FIFA clear US star Balogun to play in World Cup after Trump call
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Haaland knocks Brazil out of World Cup as Norway reach quarters
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Gauff downs Bencic to book maiden Wimbledon quarter-final
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'Catastrophic' Super Typhoon Bavi hits US island of Rota
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Spain boss backs Yamal to sparkle in Portugal World Cup showdown
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West Indies trail Sri Lanka by 231 runs
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Australia's World Cup final win vindicates Molineux's self-belief
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FIFA clear US star Balogun to play after Trump call
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Sinner powers into fifth straight Wimbledon quarter-final
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Venezuela quake survivor 'reborn' after eight days in rubble
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Euphoric homecoming for Cape Verde after heroic World Cup run ends
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Red-card U-turn rocks World Cup as England face Azteca test
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White supremacist march in DC just 'messy' democracy, official says
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Struff oldest first-time men's Slam quarter-finalist in Open era
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'Perfectionist' Djokovic not happy to win ugly at Wimbledon
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Banana!: 'Minions' knocks 'Toy Story' off N.America box office perch
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'Catastrophic' Super Typhoon Bavi aims at US Pacific island Rota
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Sabalenka wants to drink, 'forget about tennis' after Wimbledon exit
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Reflective Ronaldo takes on critics 'trying to kill me for 23 years'
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Mooney stars as Australia hammer England in women's World Cup final
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Verstappen claims Red Bull car 'dangerous' after crash
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Djokovic makes history, Osaka sends Sabalenka crashing out of Wimbledon
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Trump thanks FIFA for suspending USA's Balogun World Cup ban
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Osaka beats world number one Sabalenka in Wimbledon last 16
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Mooney stars as Australia hammer England in women's T20 World Cup final
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Eala eyeing Wimbledon quarters, Dimitrov faces Fery
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Russell concedes Ferrari are threat to Mercedes
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'Privileged' Del Toro wins Tour de France stage, Pogacar up to 2nd
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Leclerc snaps winless run to reignite title race
Beyond algorithms: Sandra Rodriguez hacks AI tools for art
Canadian artist and academic Sandra Rodriguez, by hacking artificial intelligence, hopes to demystify the novel technology topping the news of late, while showcasing its power and potential to brighten but also disrupt our lives.
In a dimly lit Montreal art space, visitors interact with her exhibit -- an AI trained on millions of online searches for erotica that generates a mosaic of pornographic videos that eventually mesh into a soup of abstract shapes.
Skin is shown as "uniformly light" and "smooth," reflecting "what the AI sees most in current pornographic videos," explains Rodriguez, who used several generative algorithms to create the images that highlight "the social biases which exist in mass pornography."
A few months earlier, she had unveiled a conversational bot inspired by American linguist Noam Chomsky whose objective was to "demystify the secrets of AI" by chatting with the public, all in a virtual world.
"It is necessary today to create works of art that speak to the public about issues that will affect them tomorrow," Rodriguez tells AFP, adding she aims to dispel fears, as well as the "somewhat unrealistic craze," surrounding AI.
"Sandra is a bit of a hacker in a certain way," says Gauthier Gidel, who has collaborated on several of her projects and is a researcher at Mila, the artificial intelligence institute of Quebec.
"She will take the tools, try to change up their use and show the world that this twisted use is almost better than the initial reason for which they were created," he explains.
For her next project, the 40-something Rodriguez plans to mix artificial intelligence with dance, a passion she has had since her childhood in Montreal where she learned salsa at neighborhood parties.
- From documentaries to AI art -
Born to a Spanish humanitarian aid worker and a Quebec teacher, Rodriguez grew up in an immigrant neighborhood in Montreal before spending part of her youth abroad.
Attending secondary school in Spain, university in Canada and then in Belgium, "it was important for our parents that we be exposed to other ways of thinking, other cultures," says the artist whose older sister lives in Madrid.
Initially trained in documentary cinema, she quickly used emerging digital media to find "new ways of telling human stories."
At the same time, she developed a course of research on ways in which the public can reappropriate new tech tools and the resulting social impacts.
For seven years, she split her time between Montreal and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, where she taught the first course devoted to the production of immersive media.
Today, several of her works embody this duality and have earned award nods at festivals including Sundance and Ars Electronica in Linz, Austria.
- 'A real danger' -
Rodriguez has a strong "desire to break the limits (of these technologies) and to go beyond them, but in an intelligent way, to bring value," says Eliane Achcar of Studio Normal.
For the artist, looking at technology through different lenses helps to reveal its flaws.
By relying only on content collected on the internet and on their own creations, generative AIs like Midjourney or Stable Diffusion that turn text prompts into images reduce "little by little creativity and the way of thinking differently," says Rodriguez.
Added to this is the question of plagiarism of the works on which these systems are based -- an issue raised by several artists before the courts.
"We need to take breaks in the development of AI," says Rodriguez, who has denounced the massive collection of data for several years. "Not so much because the systems are moving too fast, but because we don't know who is using them, what data they are using."
In 2015 Rodriguez was recognized for her work highlighting abuses by technology companies in the "DoNotTrack" project, a documentary series produced by international media.
"There is a real danger for us as citizens," she warns.
S.Gantenbein--VB