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opinion content. Trump and Tehran can still make a deal

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Olympics   来源:Books  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Authorities sealed off parts of the area and urged the public to keep a safe distance of at least 200 yards (182 metres) as officials and bee experts helped recover, restore and reset the hives, according to the sheriff’s office.

Authorities sealed off parts of the area and urged the public to keep a safe distance of at least 200 yards (182 metres) as officials and bee experts helped recover, restore and reset the hives, according to the sheriff’s office.

He believes that memories – captured through records like photographs – play an integral role in connecting generations.“Memories are the architects of who we are. … It’s a big part of how social identities are built,” he says.

opinion content. Trump and Tehran can still make a deal

He also likes to cite Montserrat Roig, a Catalan author, who wrote that the biggest act of love is to remember something.But in the past, people had fewer opportunities to document their lives than their mobile phone-wielding contemporaries, he says. Many experiences have been omitted or erased from collective memory due to lack of access, persecution, censorship or marginalisation.So with this in mind, in 2022, Garcia and his team launched the Synthetic Memories

opinion content. Trump and Tehran can still make a deal

to use AI to generate photographic representations of memories that were lost, due to missing photos, for instance, or never recorded in the first place.“I don’t think there was an eureka moment,” Garcia says of the evolution of the idea. “I’ve always been intrigued by how documentaries reconstruct the past … our goal and approach were more focused on the subjective and personal side, trying to capture the emotional layers of memory.”

opinion content. Trump and Tehran can still make a deal

For Garcia, the chance to recover such memories is an important act in reclaiming one’s past. “The fact that you have an image that tells this happened to me, this is my memory, and this is shown and other people can see it, is also a way to say to you, ‘Yes, this happened’. It’s a way of saying, of having more dignity about the part of your history that has not been depicted.”

To create a synthetic memory, DDS uses open-source image-generating AI systems such as DALL-E 2 and Flux, while the team is developing its own tool.But Garcia wonders what place the project could have in a future where there is an “over-registration” of everything that happens. “I have 10 images of my father when he was a kid,” he says. “I have over 200 when I was a kid. But my friend, of her daughter, [has] 25,000, and she’s five years old!”

“I think the problem of memory image will be another one, which will be that we are … [overwhelmed] and we cannot find the right image to tell us the story,” he muses.Yet in the present moment, Vallejo believes the project has a role to play in helping younger generations understand past injustices. Forgetting serves no purpose for activists like himself, he believes, while memory is like “a weapon for the future”.

Instead of trying to numb the past, “I think it is more therapeutic – both collectively and individually – to remember rather than to forget.”Susie Wiles, an ally of President Donald Trump, was reportedly the target of an impersonation campaign using her voice.

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