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Laura G. de Rivera in conversation with Daniel Mitma
What the algorithm tells us
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Universidad Continental (auditorio)
We are puppets of the algorithm, although sometimes we don’t realise it. The puppet master is not always artificial intelligence itself, but rather those who pull the strings to predict and mould our behaviour. The science journalist Laura G. de Rivera (Spain) has spent years researching the consequences of this invisible control. In Esclavos del algoritmo she offers a necessary and critical view of the impact of algorithmic systems on our lives. In conversation with Daniel Mitma.
This event has taken place
With the support of Acción Cultural Española, AC/E
Laura G. de Rivera in conversation with María del Milagro Lozada
What the algorithm hides
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Colegio de Arquitectos (auditorio)
We are puppets of the algorithm, although sometimes we don’t realise it. The puppet master is not always artificial intelligence itself, but rather those who pull the strings to predict and mould our behaviour. The science journalist Laura G. de Rivera (Spain) has spent years researching the consequences of this invisible control. In Esclavos del algoritmo she offers a necessary and critical view of the impact of algorithmic systems on our lives. In conversation withMaría del Milagro Lozada
This event has taken place
With the support of Acción Cultural Española, AC/E
Laura G. de Rivera and Rodrigo Quian Quiroga in conversation with Layla Hirsh
Talking about artificial intelligence
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Teatro Municipal
Artificial intelligence has come into our vocabularies and our lives, and is here to stay. Yet when we talk about it, what exactly are we talking about? AI goes beyond algorithms, robotics and promises of utopian and/or dystopian futures. Laura G. de Rivera(Spain), author of Esclavos del algoritmo, and Rodrigo Quian Quiroga (Argentina), neuroscientist and the discover of “concept neurones” talk to Layla Hirsh.
LSP Peruvian Sign Language interpretation available
This event has taken place
Sponsored by SURA and with the support of AC/E Acción Cultural Española
Laura G. de Rivera, Susan Neiman and Boima Tucker in conversation with Eduardo Dargent
Challenges: who is in charge here?
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Centro Cultural Peruano Norteamericano (teatro)
Hidden hands pull the strings of the algorithms that make us slaves; a genocide in Gaza that the world watches without blinking; left-wing movements that are lost in tribal conflicts; and the diversity and complexity of the African continent. With the first quarter of our century past, we live in a time of challenges, when it is not always clear who holds the power. Laura G. de Rivera, Susan Neiman and Boima Tuckerwill put these topics, and other challenges, on the table in conversation with Eduardo Dargent.
This event has taken place
With the support of Acción Cultural Española, AC/E and Instituto Cultural Peruano Alemán
Jorge Villacorta in conversation with José Carlos Mariátegui
The fight against algorithms
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Centro Cultural Peruano Norteamericano (auditorio)
Museums collect objects that can be often found separated from their vital networks. Moreover, algorithms fragment contemplative attention through the colonial gesture of isolating, classifying, extracting. In response to this, non-Western, interconnection epistemologies and cosmogonies operate in completely different forms of attention: multi-sensory, relational, where all is a live agent, never finished, always in a fluid and dynamic form. The challenge for the 21st century then consists of learning how to exhibit knowledge that resists the exhibition format, and how to create exhibitions-as-relationship-diagrams that do not reproduce neither the Western archival logic nor the smartphone’s “infinite scrolling”. Is an epistemic jump to the relational possible? In this session, Jorge Villacortaexplores those topics with José Carlos Mariátegui.
José Carlos Mariátegui in conversation with Sissi Hamann
What does art contribute to techonology?
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Teatro Arequepay
The British Council publication Why Technology Needs Artists: 40 International Perspectives shows how innovation lead by artists not only boosts technological progress but also generates social and economic value, integrates cultural diversity and puts forward sustainable futures centered on human values where ancestral knowledge offers models of shared wisdom. From this dual economic and political perspective, this conversation with José Carlos Mariáteguiwill reflect on its potential as evidence for public policies, innovation plans and digital governance and will also address the role of copyright in the digital world from diverse knowledge systems. Moderated by Sissi Hamann.