This special edition of the User Manual for Digital Humanists introduces the research of Kyriaki Goni who is currently the ArtScience Resident at Ars Electronica. With the support of the Art Collection Deutsche Telekom and together with science partner Prof. Martina Mara from JKU in Linz Kyriaki investigates AI systems and voice interfaces.
While it is true that digital technologies have merely accelerated processes already unfolding across the industrialized world, they have changed our world and our lives radically over the last four decades. Alongside the growing impact, unease and uncertainty are on the rise, leading the global tech industry into a crisis as we start to question more and more the impact of new technologies (fake news, human downgrading, cyber-crime, trade in personal data, etc.) on the fabric of our lives and society.
Therefore, institutions and initiatives around the globe, including Ars Electronica, are calling for a Digital Humanism that notices these omnipresent transformational processes and reflects on new pathways into a digital society. By initiating the European Platform for Digital Humanism, Ars Electronica and its partners from research, industry and cultural sectors take part in this urgent conversation focused on re-evaluating our relationship to the technologies we’ve created and how we use them – a conversation that is by no means confined to Europe but needs to be tackled on a global level.
Data Garden by Kyriaki Goni commissioned & produced by Onassis Stegi
The ArtScience Residency is enabled by the partnership of Ars Electronica and Deutsche Telekom and with the support of the Johannes Kepler University in Linz, Austria.