Jornal Opção
domingo 04 julho 2021 0:02
Por Euler de França Belém
Caio Túlio Costa diz que o modelo de negócio deve ser totalmente repensado, revirado de ponta-cabeça, bouleversado
O que está em crise não é o jornalismo, e sim o negócio-jornalismo. O jornalismo em si, a reportagem, está bem, vigilante, com audiência extraordinária. Em tempos de fake news, os leitores valorizam cada vez mais os veículos sérios, nuançados e objetivos. Mas os lucros caíram, e talvez caiam ainda mais. Até porque a comunicação desconcentrou-se, colaborando para espalhar a publicidade e, em alguns casos, tornou-a mais barata.
Au Brésil, la gestion sanitaire très contestée la-croix.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from la-croix.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Toronto Star’s Heather Mallick described them as “thoughtless, ahistorical and self-congratulatory” and proclaimed that we must stop trusting photography.
When data scientist Samuel Goree tested DeOldify, an AI colourization app, to convert a greyscale copy of Alfred T. Palmer’s 1943 photograph
Operating a hand drill at Vultee Nashville, the result produced an image in which the black female subject’s skin was lighter.
Interventions like these are not unique among the history of photographic manipulation the Cottingley Fairies photographs taken by Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths in 1917 are a prime example. But alongside sophisticated internet tools like deepfakes (where a person in an existing image or video is replaced with someone else), the use of algorithms to alter photographs has provoked renewed anxiety about the authenticity of photography in the digital era.
The controversial history of colourizing black-and-white photos laosnews.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from laosnews.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Left: Wiener with Max Born in Göttingen in 1925 (Photo: George H. Davis, Jr. Courtesy MIT Museum).
Mathematician and later father of cybernetics Norbert Wiener (1894-1964) crossed paths with many great minds in his life, from Bertrand Russell and G.H. Hardy, to Max Born, John F. Nash Jr. and John von Neumann. von Neumann’s assistant Edgar R. Lorch’s recollection of one of his boss’ encounters with Wiener bears repeating: