@ -40,14 +40,14 @@ The journal Dotawo: A Journal of Nubian Studies brings these disparate fields to
Our devices are listening to us. Previous generations of audio-technology transmitted, recorded or manipulated sound. Today our digital voice assistants, smart speakers and a growing range of related technologies are increasingly able to analyse and respond to it as well. Scientists and engineers increasingly refer to this as “machine listening”, though the first widespread use of the term was in computer music. Machine listening is much more than just a new scientific discipline or vein of technical innovation however. It is also an emergent field of knowledge-power, of data extraction and colonialism, of capital accumulation, automation and control. It demands critical and artistic attention.
MACHINE LISTENING is a new investigation and experiment in collective learning, instigated by artist www⁄Sean Dockray, legal scholar www⁄James Parker, and curator www⁄Joel Stern for www⁄Liquid Architecture and launched at www⁄Unsound 2020: Intermission. It comes out of our previous work on www⁄Eavesdropping.
MACHINE LISTENING is a new investigation and experiment in collective learning, instigated by artist Sean Dockray, legal scholar James Parker, and curator Joel Stern for Liquid Architecture and launched at Unsound 2020: Intermission. It comes out of our previous work on Eavesdropping.
NOTE: audio has a nice representation playing audio over hyperlink showing its progress.
> NOTE: audio has a nice representation playing audio over hyperlink showing its progress.
NOTE: They were not interested in printing but also didn't do all of the possible interlinking structure. A lot of links are straight to Gitea repo to markdown file even there's a rendered version on the website. They were also very early adopters so they didn't use all of the features. For example backlinks support showing where some page is `Mentioned in`. Things like that. Still very impressive work on its own.