
Anne Spalter
5.7K posts

Anne Spalter
@annespalter
Anne Spalter is a leading digital artist, educator, and author. Sotheby's | Phillips | NYT | Pompidou. Happy apocalypse. https://t.co/Z2W2UQD89q



Trevor Paglen is this year’s winner of the Guggenheim LG Award for technology-minded artists, the New York museum revealed on Tuesday. Through the prize, he will win $100,000, a vast sum that he said will support the costs of his work, which contends with surveillance technology and AI. Read more: artnews.com/art-news/news/…

In celebration of Women’s History Month, we welcome pioneering digital artist @annespalter and multimedia artist @Infinite_Mantra (Lindsay Kokoska). 📅 March 6 🕚 11 AM ET Hosted by @Elena_Zavelev In collaboration with @theHUGart. Set a reminder! twitter.com/i/spaces/1nxnR…







Ready to make the switch? claude.com/import-memory






A digital art pantheon list that erases women isn’t neutral… Measuring influence by money is obfuscation. Correction can start now. Add your favorite artists 🙋♀️ @NeuralBricolage @PanterXhita @sashastiles @missalsimpson @annespalter @artbyjstelco @CaballeroAnaMa @thesarahshow


ALERT - HACKING DISGUISED AS AN INTERVIEW Artists friends — please read and share this. I was nearly caught by an sophisticated phishing attempt disguised as an interview request by an account called @glitchsachi for @Web3Unchained. The email looked legitimate, this person had studied my work, and the questions were accurate. Of course, they could also easily have been generated by a good AI deep research agent. I accepted, booked a slot via they Calendly, and everything seemed normal — until one hour before the interview, when I received a link to join through an app called @lumainapp I had never heard of. It looked legit at first (website, Medium posts…), but required downloading a package. A deeper look revealed warnings that the software was suspicious (see screenshot). I asked for a standard link from a legit platform (Meet, Zoom…). The “interviewer” insisted they were already connected, sending a screenshot (see below) — which I noticed was dated October 17th, while we were on December 3rd. I replied that I suspected a scam and would cancel without a proper link. Within minutes, the meeting was quietly cancelled. I was trained in cybersecurity, and even so, this attempt initially looked convincing. AI now allows scammers to tailor extremely credible traps. Please stay vigilant: never download unknown apps, always double-check links, and share this warning with fellow artists. It could prevent serious harm. PS: They even seem to have a fake PSA on their website. PS2: It's sad because the questions were actually good and if there wasn't this troian attack attempt, this could have been a nice interview.






