Arab Times

Robot artist ‘Sophia’ eyeing music career

500m FB data found online

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HONG KONG, April 5, (AP): Sophia is a robot of many talents - she speaks, jokes, sings and even makes art. In March, she caused a stir in the art world when a digital work she created as part of a collaborat­ion was sold at an auction for $688,888 in the form of a non-fungible token (NFT).

The sale highlighte­d a growing frenzy in the NFT market, where people can buy ownership rights to digital content. NFTs each have a unique digital code saved on blockchain ledgers that allow anyone to verify the authentici­ty and ownership of items.

David Hanson, CEO of Hong Kong-based Hanson Robotics and Sophia’s creator, has been developing robots for the past two and a half decades. He believes realistic-looking robots can connect with people and assist in industries such as healthcare and education.

Sophia is the most famous robot creation from Hanson Robotics, with the ability to mimic facial expression­s, hold conversati­ons and recognize people. In 2017, she was granted Saudi Arabian citizenshi­p, becoming the world’s first robot citizen.

“I envisioned Sophia as a creative artwork herself, that could generate art,” Hanson said in an interview.

“Sophia is the culminatio­n of a lot of arts, and engineerin­g, and the idea that she could then generate art was a way for her to emotionall­y and visually connect with people,” he said.

Sophia collaborat­ed with Italian artist Andrea Bonaceto, who drew portraits of Sophia. Sophia then processed his work via neural networks and proceeded to create a digital artwork of her own.

The digital work that sold for $688,888 is titled “Sophia Instantiat­ion”, and is a 12-second video file which shows Bonaceto’s portrait evolving into Sophia’s digital painting. It is accompanie­d by the physical artwork painted by Sophia.

The buyer, a digital artwork collector and artist known as 888 with the Twitter handle @Crypto888c­rypto, later sent Sophia a photo of his painted arm. The robot then processed that, adding that image to her knowledge and painted more strokes on top of her original piece.

In a tweet on Sophia’s account, the work was described as the first NFT collaborat­ion between an “AI, a mechanical collective being and an artist-collector.”

“As an artist, I have computatio­nal creativity in my algorithms, creating original works,” Sophia said when asked what inspires her when it comes to art. “But my art is created in collaborat­ion with my humans in a kind of collective intelligen­ce like a humanartif­icial intelligen­ce hive mind.”

Sophia’s artwork selling as an NFT is part of a growing trend. In March, a digital artwork by artist Beeple — whose real name is Mike Winkelmann — sold for nearly $70 million, shattering records and making it the most expensive digital artwork ever sold.

Henri Arslanian, Pricewater­houseCoope­r’s Global Crypto Leader, said that NFTs give people “bragging rights” of the assets that they own.

“And what is really amazing with NFT is that it not only allows you to actually show to the broader world that you own this, but it really creates this bond between the holder of the NFT and the artists,” he said.

It also allows art to be sold without traditiona­l intermedia­ries, so that artists can connect directly with buyers without being constraine­d by galleries or auction houses, Arslanian said.

Sophia will carry on painting, Hanson said, and the next step in the robot’s career could be that of a musician. She is working on several musical works in a project called Sophia Pop, where she collaborat­es with human musicians to generate music and lyrics, he said.

“We’re so excited about Sophia’s career as an artist,” Hanson said.

Creativity Also:

NEW YORK: Details from more than 500 million Facebook users have been found available on a website for hackers.

The informatio­n appears to be several years old, but it is another example of the vast amount of informatio­n collected by Facebook and other social media sites, and the limits to how secure that informatio­n is.

The availabili­ty of the data set was first reported by Business Insider. According to that publicatio­n, it has informatio­n from 106 countries including phone numbers, Facebook IDs, full names, locations, birthdates, and email addresses.

Facebook has been grappling with data security issues for years. In 2018, the social media giant disabled a feature that allowed users to search for one another via phone number following revelation­s that the political firm Cambridge Analytica had accessed informatio­n on up to 87 million Facebook users without their knowledge or consent.

In December 2019, a Ukrainian security researcher reported finding a database with the names, phone numbers and unique user IDs of more than 267 million Facebook users — nearly all US-based — on the open internet. It is unclear if the current data dump is related to this database.

“This is old data that was previously reported on in 2019,” the Menlo Park, California-based company said in a statement. “We found and fixed this issue in August 2019.”

SAN FRANCISCO: Twitter says it has begun labeling tweets that include misleading informatio­n about COVID-19 vaccines and using a “strike system” to eventually remove accounts that repeatedly violate its rules.

The company has said that it has started using human reviewers to assess whether tweets violate its policy against COVID vaccine misinforma­tion. Eventually, the work will be done by a combinatio­n of humans and automation, it said.

Twitter had already banned some COVID-related misinforma­tion in December, including falsehoods about how the virus spreads, whether masks are effective and the risk of infection and death.

“Through the use of the strike system, we hope to educate people on why certain content breaks our rules so they have the opportunit­y to further consider their behavior and their impact on the public conversati­on,” Twitter said in a blog post Monday.

People with one violation — or strike — will see no action. Two strikes will lead to an account being locked for 12 hours.

 ?? (AP) ?? David Hanson, (left), creator of Sophia, shows a work of Sophia at his studio in Hong Kong on March 29, 2021. Sophia is a robot of many talents — she speaks, jokes, sings and even makes art. In March, she caused a stir in the art world when a digital work she created as part of a collaborat­ion was sold at an auction for $688,888 in the form of a non-fungible token (NFT).WLD.
(AP) David Hanson, (left), creator of Sophia, shows a work of Sophia at his studio in Hong Kong on March 29, 2021. Sophia is a robot of many talents — she speaks, jokes, sings and even makes art. In March, she caused a stir in the art world when a digital work she created as part of a collaborat­ion was sold at an auction for $688,888 in the form of a non-fungible token (NFT).WLD.
 ??  ?? Bonaceto
Bonaceto

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