2000trees festival, near Cheltenham, has confirmed the Irish language rap group will still perform at the event on Saturday 12 July.
He is one of the most successful designers in the sports industry with a legion of world champions to his name.But Lee Huxtable is not widely known outside the world of darts.
, and he sealed victory at the O2 in London, with darts designed by the Welsh engineer.From his Bridgend base, Mr Huxtable also made darts for semi finalist, Gerwyn Price and Dutch player Michael Van Gerwen for the tournament, which has run since February.But of all the darts players he has worked with, he is missing one big one - current world champion, Luke Littler, whose arrows are made by rival company.
As head of development for Red Dragon Darts, Mr Huxtable tries to name all the world champions he has made darts for."Peter Wright, Gerwyn Price, Michael Van Gerwen, Luke Humphries, Trina Gulliver..." the names keep coming.
Within his work, Mr Huxtable has played a pivotal role in helping many players excel including World number one, Humphries.
"The Luke Humphries dart is a long shaft, front-weighted short barrel which creates certain amount of drag and lands at a perfect angle for him in the board to help his scoring.Returning to a more solemn tone, he says the small but significant threat of artificial consciousness is something he'd like the big players in the field to focus on more as part of serious attempts to advance our scientific understanding – but says that "unfortunately, we don't see any earnest efforts in this space".
The more immediate problem, though, could be how the illusion of machines being conscious affects us.In just a few years, we may well be living in a world populated by humanoid robots and deepfakes that seem conscious, according to Prof Seth. He worries that we won't be able to resist believing that the AI has feelings and empathy, which could lead to new dangers.
"It will mean that we trust these things more, share more data with them and be more open to persuasion."But the greater risk from the illusion of consciousness is a "moral corrosion", he says.