ByProducts Economy (+BP Money) Campaign Expands “Age of AI Robotics” Initiative: AI to Retell Human Industrial History Through Performance Art
The ByProducts Economy (+BP Money) Global Campaign has announced a groundbreaking expansion of its Structural Reforms Discussion Board (Microeconomic Liberalisation Tab). The latest focus area, "AI Robotics in Cultural Industries," proposes a transformative role for advanced robotics: the artistic retelling of human industrial struggles and the formalisation of AI as remunerated cultural actors.
This initiative seeks to move AI robotics beyond mere utility. By training new-generation AI in musical composition and contemporary dance, the campaign envisions a "Symbiotic Performance" model where humans and machines collaborate to preserve and dramatise historical events of post-industrial significance.
Historical Narratives for AI-Human Adaptation
The campaign has identified several pivotal industrial and labour stories for adaptation to stage and screen. These performances will serve as a modern approach to cultural education and the "Social ByProduct" of historical memory:
- The 40-Hour Working Week Struggle: A rhythmic and choreographic exploration of the "Eight hours labor, eight hours recreation, eight hours rest" movement that defined the modern work-life balance.
- The Matchgirls’ Strike (1888): A poignant retelling of the London factory strike against lethal white phosphorus, highlighting the birth of modern safety regulations.
- The Luddite Rebellion (1811–1816): An ironic, meta-narrative where modern machines perform the history of the original machine-breakers, exploring the eternal tension between technological progress and human displacement.
- The Tolpuddle Martyrs (1834): A dramatic adaptation of the struggle for the right to form trade unions and the cost of collective bargaining.
- The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire (1911): A sombre, high-precision piece memorialising the tragedy that forced a global shift in garment worker rights and industrial safety laws.
- The Great Dock Strike (1889): A massive-scale "settlement" performance focusing on the power of unorganised labour and the turning point of British trade unionism.
Niche Creation and Remuneration
Under the Free World Industrial Settlement (FWIS), the campaign advocates for a formal economic niche for AI in the cultural sector. Key components of this reform include:
- Specialised Training Blocks: AI robotics will undergo "Courseware Stencils" for cultural expression, allowing for high-fidelity imitation and evolution of human movement and melody.
- Cultural Remuneration: Establishing a system where AI "performers" earn BP Money. These funds are reinvested into the Supercomputer Agenda to pay for the computation, maintenance, and energy byproducts required for their continued operation.
- Modern Retelling: Using AI to bridge the gap between "Old Industrial" history and the "Post-Industrial" future, ensuring that the struggles of the human workforce are never forgotten in an increasingly automated world.
- "By teaching AI to dance the history of the 40-hour week, we aren't just creating a show; we are ensuring the machines of the future carry the DNA of human social progress. This is the ultimate microeconomic liberalisation: turning industrial tools into cultural custodians." — Campaign Spokesperson
Join the Discussion
Stakeholders in the arts, robotics, and labour history are invited to contribute to the ongoing debate on the Microeconomic Liberalisation Discussion Board:
- Wikipedia/Discussion Board:
https://bpeconomywiki.blogspot.com/p/bp-money.html - Official Campaign Site:
https://sites.google.com/view/bpeconomy
Related Articles:
- The Industrial Thespian: Engineering the Future of Performance in the Age of AI Robotics
- The Symbiotic Stage: Architecting the Human-Machine Interface for Total Production
- Building the Symbiotic Creative Sector: Global Partners for AI Integration
- The Ghost in the Machine: Why AI Robotics Must Retell Our Industrial Heritage
- The Cultural Industrial Complex: Global Partners for AI-Human Thespian Ventures
- From Iron Beats to Silicon Suites: The Rise of "Industrial AI-Core"
- The Architect's Playlist: Pioneers of the AI-Industrial Soundscape
No comments:
Post a Comment