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@@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ One way of responding to this possibility would be to simply bracket the questio |
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Another response would be to say that when or if machines listen, they listen : not in order to understand, or even facilitate human understanding, but to perform an operation: to diagnose, to identify, to recognize, to trigger.[^Faroki, Paglen] And we could notice that as listening becomes increasingly operational sound does too. [Operational acoustics](https://www.trillbit.com/trillbit-home-page.html "Creating the Internet of sound"): sounds made by machines for machine listeners. [Adversarial acoustics](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4XXGDVs0f8 "Adversarial Music Demo Video"): sounds made by machines _against_ human listeners, and vice versa.[^Billy Li] |
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# Footnotes |
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# Resources |
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[^Cella, Serizel, Ellis]:  |
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[^alper]: Meryl Alper, _Giving Voice: Mobile Communication, Disability_, and Inequality (MIT Press, 2017) |
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