Opinion
Indiatimes on MSNOpinion
AI caricature trend: A harmless fun or digital dependence? Rise of AI Slop explained
The viral AI caricature trend may seem harmless, but it reflects a deeper issue: the rise of AI slop, mass-produced, algorithm-driven content flooding our feeds.
As artificial intelligence reshapes the 21st century, Student B Press has launched Animal Intelligence, a cross-genre publishing project that revives animal fables and editorial cartoons as tools for ...
Artificial intelligence has become unavoidable part of modern life, but Wendy has some questions about whether it's truly intelligent at all ...
WhoWhatWhy on MSN
Pam’s way with words
Bondi versus Justice. Pam’s Way With Words originally appeared on WhoWhatWhy ...
Transdisciplinary artist Stephanie Dinkins challenges us to rethink what we feed our machines—and asks what AI might become if it were trained on care ...
Columbus computer scientist Dean Allemang got into artificial intelligence in the late 1980s to help people become more intelligent. AI never quite fulfilled that role, but Allemang said that today it ...
Launched in summer 2025, the call for concepts invited creative minds to explore how artificial intelligence can transform the Palais' event spaces and renew the visitor experience. Emphasis was ...
As the 2026 Winter Olympics Opening Ceremony kicked off, viewers around the world were dismayed by a commemorative cartoon ...
A new robot out of China can change its shape by inflating or deflating, and its creators hope it can be put to use for search and rescue operations.
Nancy Cartwright, the woman who voices Bart Simpson on the iconic animated series 'The Simpsons,' shared her thoughts on potentially getting replaced by AI someday. Cartwright caught up with PEOPLE ...
In Minneapolis, videos of the Alex Pretti killing undermined the federal government’s account. But an A.I. video of Brad Pitt shows the dangers ahead.
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