E30
December 6, 2024
The Age of Noise w/ Eryk Salvaggio
Hosted by
Alix Dunn

What happens if you ask a generative AI image model to show you what Picasso’s work would have looked like if he lived in Japan in the 16th century? Would it produce something totally new, or just mash together stereotypical aesthetics from Picasso’s work, and 16th century Japan?This week, Alix interviewed Eryk Salvaggio, who shares his ideas around how we are moving away from ‘the age of information’ and into an age of noise, where we’ve prog...

On Computer Says Maybe, host Alix Dunn interviews visionaries and cutting edge researchers to help you wade through the wacky and worrying world of new technology.
Contact us with your feedback and suggestions, or if you’re keen to explore your area in conversation. We have rotating co-hosts and expert guests that help us deep dive into a particular topic. Write to us anytime at team@saysmaybe.com.
Show Notes
What happens if you ask a generative AI image model to show you what Picasso’s work would have looked like if he lived in Japan in the 16th century? Would it produce something totally new, or just mash together stereotypical aesthetics from Picasso’s work, and 16th century Japan?

This week, Alix interviewed Eryk Salvaggio, who shares his ideas around how we are moving away from ‘the age of information’ and into an age of noise, where we’ve progressed so far into a paradigm of easy and frictionless information sharing, that information has transformed into an overwhelming wall of noise.

So if everything is just noise, what do we filter out and keep in — and what systems do we use to do that?
Further reading:
Eryk Salvaggio has been making tech-critical art since the dawn of the Internet. Now he’s a blend of artist, tech policy researcher, and writer focused on a critical approach to AI. He is the Emerging Technologies Research Advisor at the Siegel Family Endowment, an instructor in Responsible AI at Elisava Barcelona School of Design, a researcher at the metaLab (at) Harvard University’s AI Pedagogy Project, one of the top contributors to Tech Policy Press, and an artist whose work has been shown at festivals including SXSW, DEFCON, and Unsound.
Transcript