James Bridle
Meet the Artist Using Ritual Magic to Trap Self-Driving Cars
Well, it's actually science, but for James Bridle science and magic aren't that distinct.
Meet the Artist Using Ritual Magic to Trap Self-Driving Cars
Well, it's actually science, but for James Bridle science and magic aren't that distinct.
Here's What Happens When You Mix Weather, Political Data, and Machine Learning
James Bridle’s 'Cloud Index' correlates different datasets in order to better understand technology.
The End of Big Data
It's the world after personal data: all identifying information is illegal. No servers, no search records, no social, no surveillance. A pair of satellites, circling the planet, make sure the data centers are turned off—and stay off.
Little Sister's Watching, Too: Surveillance Art and the Ethics of Looking
The show features 14 works from artists, like Trevor Paglen and James Bridle, that explore the intersections of surveillance agencies and operations with civic rights and privacy.
The Internet Looks Like Nothing
We visualize the internet like a vast circuit board, but the stories that make up the internet’s infrastructure have much more depth than a simple diagram.
Enter Restricted Government Areas in Virtual Reality
In his new exhibition, James Bridle attacks governments’ cultures of “We can neither confirm nor deny” secrecy.
Find Out Your 'Algorithmic Citizenship' Based on the Websites You Visit
Artist James Bridle's latest work questions where we belong as inhabitants of the web.
Edward Snowden's Smashed Laptop Belongs to Everyone
The London museum's 'All of This Belongs to You' explores privacy in the digital age and the place of museums in a contemporary city.
Provoking Participation Through Art at Eyebeam's 2015 Annual Showcase
From games that accidentally teach coding to a device that kills cell phone frequencies, Eyebeam's annual showcase explores interaction in every form.
This Artist's Database Compiles All Known Data on the Drone Wars
But all it shows is that more data doesn't mean more power.
Artists Show How Anyone Can Fight the Man with Open Data
From military drones to government expenses, there's a lot of data out there.