Adapting to AI in the Creative Industries
Learn what are experts saying about the anticipated 5-10 year trends for AI capability across creative industries in Australia.
Learn what are experts saying about the anticipated 5-10 year trends for AI capability across creative industries in Australia.
Following the success of our pilot webinar, registrations are now open for our next session. Sign up today!
This 3 hour webinar provides participants with a comprehensive overview of the changes taking place in the creative industries as a result of AI. Whether your business is pro- or anti-AI, developing, using or competing with AI tools, it is essential to understand the technology, core social issues, and associated trends.
Please note, for those who attended the first iteration of this webinar in July, this is a shorter adapation without new content.
Faculty of Arts, Design & Architecture
School of Art & Design
Online
6 November 2024
3 hours
$50.00 AUD
10am - 1pm AEDT
Learners will gain knowledge and skills relating to:
This webinar is delivered 100% online via Zoom and is completed over 3 hours.
Associate Professor Oliver Bown
Oliver Bown is an Associate Professor in Art & Design at UNSW, a global top-20 university. He is an international partner investigator on the European Research Council’s Advanced Grant, “Music and AI: Building critical interdisciplinary studies”, hosted by University College London’s Institute for Advanced Studies. Oliver has addressed the World Intellectual Property Organisation on foundational concepts of creative AI, and in 2024 was invited to review the Australian National AI Safety Standard. Oliver's book “” was published by MIT Press in 2021. He has a history of digital art practice and music production, producing generative installation and performance works for the Sydney Opera House, AMP, ANU’s School of Cybernetics, the North Sea Jazz Festival, the BBC, the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, and electronic music pioneer Aphex Twin. He regularly speaks to broadcast and print media on trends in creative AI, including The ABC, The Sydney Morning Herald, and The Economist.
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