One Man's Spam Is Another Man's Art 117
mytrip writes "Most people see Viagra ads and Nigerian scams as simply more e-mail to delete. Alex Dragulescu sees art.
For the last several years, the Romanian-born computer artist has applied techniques in computational modeling and information visualization to invent a new form of artistic expression. One of his more notable projects involved creating what he calls Spam Plants. He wrote algorithms that analyzed various text and data points of junk e-mail to produce "organic" images of plantlike structures that spontaneously grew based on incoming spam.
"
Spam != Art (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Spam != Art (Score:1)
The only way to make Spam art involves carving canned ham!
Didn't RTFA, eh? The expression is mostly in creating the algorithms and analysing the relationships between subjects, headers and other bits.
TFA also mentions taking the contents of Blogs and doing similar things. I wonder what this fellow could do with first posts from /.
the 'in soviet russia' and 1. [do something] 2. ??? 3. profit!!!! works are stunning, but the 'imagine a beowulf cluster' piece does nothing for me and that 'but does it ru
Re:Spam != Art (Score:2)
I perused it. Looked at the pictures mostly. I got the idea. My comment was based on TFA's title as well as the slashdot title which, I admit, rarely has anything to do with TFA.
You want a more OT post?
The idea is interesting, but the art based on words won't work when a spammer sends a GIF image of the message. It may make for more complex images if the "artist" used something more "wordy" than just spam, such as a novel or slashdot article. Personally, I would rather see art based on
Re:Spam != Art (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Spam != Art (Score:2)
Funny, funny stuff, too.
Sorry. (Score:3, Interesting)
Just $.02
Re:Sorry. (Score:4, Interesting)
Now if only it compiled the images as large bitmaps, distributed them globally through a shared system of thousands of computers, then bombarded the offending spammer's IP with lots of pretty pictures that he/she helped create.
Re:Sorry. (Score:5, Insightful)
Constructive uses for spam (Score:1)
Re:Sorry. (Score:1, Flamebait)
But therein lies the artistic point, doesn't it? I hate to be too art-schooly (actually, I don't, I quite enjoy it), but there is obviously something much more behind what you say. These pictures are beautiful, but they can be just as beautiful if generated by other input, say for instance love-letters, the collected works of Shakespeare, or the Bill of Rights. But also spam. We think of spam as somehow less valuble, less good than these other things, but one could argue (and that is what I think the artist
Re:Sorry. (Score:2)
The point is, I disagree with the title of the story. It's not "One Man's Spam Is Another Man's Art". The spam
Re:Sorry. (Score:2)
I wasn't actually referring to you (ie. the little note in the parenthesis), I was referring to the other people on this story that has made some rather bad comments. I apologise if you took offence, I meant none to you.
Anyway, you have a point, the title is misleading. It should be "Making art out of spam" or something like it.
Re:Sorry. (Score:2)
Re:Sorry. (Score:5, Funny)
Flamebait? (Score:2)
Re:Sorry. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sorry. (Score:1)
Actually I've come up with more inspiring images just smacking my head against the keyboard.
Hmm, guess the spam (Score:5, Funny)
All-in-all, the plants look cooler than the other ads, but I think a video showing the plant 'growing' with spam would be more interesting than the stills
Re:Hmm, guess the spam (Score:2, Interesting)
The size of the message might determine how bushy the plant is. Certain keywords, such as "Nigerian," might trigger more branches. But Dragulescu did not inject any irony. Messages about Viagra do not grow taller, for example.
He didn't want to grow hairy palm trees
Uh... yeah. (Score:1)
Re:Uh... yeah. (Score:2)
So there's a (Score:1)
Can't wait (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Can't wait (Score:2)
No, this is not art (Score:5, Insightful)
When one writes a program that produces pictures, the software may itself be art, but the pictures it produces are not.
I'd go further and say that 'good art' also requires the input of emotion, and the stronger the emotion, and the more the viewer feels this emotion, the better the art in many cases. We engineers also produce objects with skill and imagination, but we are not artists.
Re:No, this is not art (Score:5, Insightful)
Math is a program
Re:No, this is not art (Score:1)
Assuming life evolved and was not created as such, is a tree art, or is it just beautiful to us humans?
Re:No, this is not art (Score:3, Interesting)
A "fractalist" (for lack of any better term) uses a machine (computer) and his skill with the machine and his knowledge of math to take "pictures" of a purely mathematical world. Again, the pictures can range from purely documentary shots for a
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2, Interesting)
For a thesis project in undergrad, I did some work with chaos and the mandelbrot and julia sets. These numbers really do produce some beautiful pictures. But the pictures that were produced was not the art, but the math and code that drove them.
With nothing else to show, it looks like he got some computer generated building blocks and glued them together.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
art is not group theory (Score:2)
No, because group theory is not sufficient to describe the reason a picture of a naked woman is beautiful.
Re: (Score:2)
it doesn't have to be about beauty (Score:2)
Re:No, this is not art (Score:3, Insightful)
I disagree.
Britannica Online defines art as "the use of skill and imagination in the creation of aesthetic objects, environments, or experiences that can be shared with others"
That being the case, the skill of the artist's programming and selection of input for the program (by choosing spam instead of, say, joke forwards or urban legend forwards) has resulted in the creation of an aesthetic, though virtual, object.
Re:No, this is not art (Score:1)
Why is that? Why can't both the program and its output be seen as the result of a use of skill and imagination?
Re:No, this is not art (Score:1)
Or are you just saying anything generated by a computer regardless of what amount of human input went in to it is not art?
Does that mean A Bugs Life is not art?
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2)
I don't think that imagination is a prerequisite for art - just creation.
I'm going to have to disagree about emotion being the necessary prereq for good art. Tec
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2)
So, Rembrandt's expertise and brushtrokes were art, but his paintings are not?
Not all art is intended to evoke emotion. Some is meant to provoke thought. Some is meant to just be aesthetically pleasing.
I'll
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2, Flamebait)
And yes, that's about the level of reasoning my argument should contain, because that's about the level of reasoning you're putting into it.
It's art if someone says it is! Drop this absolutist crap already.
Re:No, this is not art (Score:1)
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2)
I've known way too many engineers (and developers) to buy your argument. Most good engineers apply as much emotion -- and intuition -- to their work as they do skill and imagination. The end results are often things that have an incredible am
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2)
This is little bit like saying "when one prepares pigments and canvas, cleans brushes and so on to produce a painting, the pigments and canvas and brushes are art, the painting isn't".
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2)
"I'd go further and say that 'good art' also requires the input of emotion, and the stronger the emotion, and the more the viewer feels this emotion, the better the art in many cases."
You imply that emotional input on the part of the artist is directly linked to emotional feeling on behalf of a viewer. I don't see the connection. If I show you an image that I drew by hand, designed to evoke a feeling of pathos, you would therefore claim that this is art. But
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2)
You, good sir, are completely wrong. First off, I refer you to an earlier post of mine [slashdot.org] where I explained in detail why this is not only art, but do a simple analysis of it. It is, most certainly, art.
In general, your definition of art is very much to narrow. Let's take Duchamps Fountain for instance. This is one of the most famous works of art produced in the world, and it was infact voted the most influential work of art in the 20th century by 500 british art-experts. It's been discussed endlessly. You kn
Re:No, this is not art (Score:2)
The Mona Lisa is not art. The skill and imagination employed in painting the picture may have been art, but the picture itself, the finished product, clearly is not.
Unless you want to claim that the physical picture IS 'the use of skill and imagination in the creation of objects'
Which is nonsense.
Or perhaps you're claiming, if I hold a paintbrush and wiggle some muscles in such a way that a picture results, then it IS art. But if I hold a keyboard, and wiggle some muscles in such
Random Art based on the not so Random? (Score:3, Funny)
So the Importnat question is: what colors/styles do the porn map to? Because I'm betting you see a fair amount of 'art' generated directly from that.
Finally. (Score:3, Interesting)
I admit that it wasn't much, but it's still art that found spam useful.
Re:Finally. (Score:1)
So spam is useful.
filtering? (Score:2, Funny)
Sooo... (Score:2)
I'll take three boxes... for my, uh, garden...
Interesting (Score:1)
Image 2 [com.com] looks pretty cool, a cross between hens-and-chicks and ice plant or maybe an anemone
Image 1 [com.com] looks like something those m3dz are supposed to do for the below average male.
Image 6 [com.com] reminds me of something I pulled out of the liver of a lake perch (wonder how that thing lived, make sure you cook fish thoroughly!)
Re: (Score:1)
Beautiful Spam (Score:2)
#2 Reminded me of clownfish.
Now if we could only make money off of deleting our spam, it would be a beautiful thing.
How does your garden grow? (Score:5, Funny)
not so clever (Score:1)
Several of the images really just use the spam as a random number generator.
Maybe I can use spam to randomize a game of online poker and make the front page of slashdot, too!
Re:not so clever (Score:1)
I don't know... (Score:1)
Random Coolness (Score:1)
Bizarre spam I recieved, almost poetry (Score:1, Funny)
--------
From: Shera Kyle
Date: May 26, 2006 4:22 PM
Subject: Latest Softwares Such as Microsoft Windows XP Professional SP2, Visual Studio 2005 Server Workgroup, Mathworks Matlab R2006a, from $15, Instant Download! idea
To: *******************.com
showed miserable thank longer god. convenient sandwich latter oh? goodbye parents central room twenty-one.
welcome miss rich. trees however burst happen again.
telling letter yours bridge? forty letter promised between.
Re:Bizarre spam I recieved, almost poetry (Score:2)
I know I tried to read it skipping a word or two to see if it was an encrypted message behind it... no luck hahahha
Now the spammers will sue for copyright (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't laugh, I'm surprised it hasn't happened.
Destructive Derivative Work (Score:2)
Re:Destructive Derivative Work (Score:1)
Slimey spammers (Score:1)
I need to get more sleep (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I need to get more sleep (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I need to get more sleep (Score:1)
Very complex RNG (Score:2)
Re:Very complex RNG (Score:1)
Re:Very complex RNG (Score:2)
Spamusement? (Score:1)
Print Spam (Score:2, Funny)
Art (Score:1)
One time I did a spline interpolation of dots with coordinates I took from
spam, that is just crap (Score:2)
Re:spam, that is just crap (Score:2)
After all; it "contains" GPL code.
Art (Score:1)
I do agree with what one poster said earlier that the software itself is art to a good extent, but if this were setup as a tool for people to play with you'd probebly see people putting in different types of input to produce different results. Wither it's a brush on a canvis or strings of ascii text to function call, it's all input of some form. Who knows, maybe the next big thi
I want a new email reader... (Score:3, Interesting)
It would work kinda like most baysian filters that give a percent likelyhood that a message is spam, except the prettier the flower, the more likely a message is spam.
Sure it's a waste of CPU cycles, but it would make recieving spam much more pleasurable.
Not read much spam, huh? (Score:1)
Re:Not read much spam, huh? (Score:1)
And if they wrote them theirselves, the are certainly in the wrong line of business!!
*grin*
Kris
Using spam as an instant number generator (Score:1)
I guess I'd better patent this fast!
Kewl... (Score:1)
Blech (Score:1)
I read spam as sperm, blech. I need more sleep.
Apophenia (Score:3, Interesting)
In a word (Score:2)
But I do wonder if "Viagra" makes the plant grow taller and more erect.
Entropy? (Score:2)
Meaning in Pattern (Score:1)
Navigate your Inbox via spamtree: email from existing contacts collects in bright shiney flowers, while spam becomes part of ugly growing flowers that can be "cut" and
Methinks the "spam" aspect is a gimmick. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's rather like the phony "participative" art... like the staircase they have, or used to have, at the Boston Museum of Science, where descending the steps interrupts light beams and creates wind-chime-like music. You sense a connection between your actions and the music, and for about fifteen seconds it's cool, but then you gradually realize that you aren't really controlling the music or pouring anything meaningful of your own into the artwork.
For that matter, it's like a wind chime. The aural experience is shaped far more by the designer of the chime than by the wind.
Or... for one more analogy... is this really different from the Andy O'Meara's G-Force visualization plugin for MP3 players... or the 1930's "color organs?"
The annoying part is that the most novel aspect is the claimed connection with spam. Because of the novelty of using spam as the semi-random seeding function, I believe he's probably managed to get much more notice of his art than if he had used something less novel.
Now that's the way to eliminate spam (Score:1)
I like SPAM... (Score:1)
Maybe I am easily amused.
Did anyone else misread this? (Score:2)