Skip to main content

Google’s newly launched Magenta Project aims to create art with artificial intelligence

Artificial intelligence excels at crunching numbers and finding patterns in data, but it isn’t as skilled at intuition or recognizing objects in images. AI typically struggles to accomplish many tasks that we humans find innately easy — but that might not always be the case.

Google is intent on developing AI that does human things at least as well as human beings. Earlier this year, the company’s AlphaGo AI defeated a master Go champion in the sophisticated game of intuition. Last year, the company’s DeepDream program created remarkable art by attempting to detect faces and other patterns in images. Both programs used artificial neural networks to filter incredible amounts of information and uncover patterns in the data.

Recommended Videos

Inspired by the competitive success of AlphaGo and the cultural appeal of DeepDream, Google plans to expand its AI further into the humanities with the creation of the Magenta project, reports Popular Science. Set to launch June 1, the Magenta project is “an effort to generate music, video, images and text using machine intelligence,” writes researcher Douglas Eck on Google’s website.

Google won’t keep its machine’s artistic advances under lock and key. Along with its open-sourced AI engine, TensorFlow, the Magenta project will “produce open-source tools and models that help creative people be even more creative,” Eck writes.

Open sourcing software might seem to go against business sense, but it actually has a number of benefits for tech companies. For one, it enables them to reap the rewards of essentially free labor from independent developers, whose work helps train the machine learning systems. And when independent developers use a particular open-source engine, that engine has a better chance of becoming an industry standard. In the vision of OpenAI’s Elon Musk and Peter Thiel, when AI development is democratized, everyone wins.

To begin, the Magenta project will aim to develop algorithms that can compose (listenable) music before attempting to create valuable visual art. At the Moogfest music and technology festival, Eck shared an idea about an app that would feature the art developed by the Magenta project users, reports Popular Science. The app would function both as a gallery to display the system’s works and a place for people to review the art to determine whether the pieces are aesthetically valuable – and whether AI can compete with Dalí.

Dyllan Furness
Dyllan Furness is a freelance writer from Florida. He covers strange science and emerging tech for Digital Trends, focusing…
Many hybrids rank as most reliable of all vehicles, Consumer Reports finds
many hybrids rank as most reliable of all vehicles evs progress consumer reports cr tout cars 0224

For the U.S. auto industry, if not the global one, 2024 kicked off with media headlines celebrating the "renaissance" of hybrid vehicles. This came as many drivers embraced a practical, midway approach rather than completely abandoning gas-powered vehicles in favor of fully electric ones.

Now that the year is about to end, and the future of tax incentives supporting electric vehicle (EV) purchases is highly uncertain, it seems the hybrid renaissance still has many bright days ahead. Automakers have heard consumer demands and worked on improving the quality and reliability of hybrid vehicles, according to the Consumer Reports (CR) year-end survey.

Read more
U.S. EVs will get universal plug and charge access in 2025
u s evs will get universal plug charge access in 2025 ev car to charging station power cable plugged shutterstock 1650839656

And then, it all came together.

Finding an adequate, accessible, and available charging station; charging up; and paying for the service before hitting the road have all been far from a seamless experience for many drivers of electric vehicles (EVs) in the U.S.

Read more
Rivian tops owner satisfaction survey, ahead of BMW and Tesla
The front three-quarter view of a 2022 Rivian against a rocky backdrop.

Can the same vehicle brand sit both at the bottom of owner ratings in terms of reliability and at the top in terms of overall owner satisfaction? When that brand is Rivian, the answer is a resonant yes.

Rivian ranked number one in satisfaction for the second year in a row, with owners especially giving their R1S and R1T electric vehicle (EV) high marks in terms of comfort, speed, drivability, and ease of use, according to the latest Consumer Reports (CR) owner satisfaction survey.

Read more