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The Economist

The steal industry is booming

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Plagiarism is an old vice, which has taken on new relevance in the age of artificial intelligence. The big questions that inevitably arise concern what constitutes intellectual theft and what can be considered acceptable borrowing or inspiration.

mariaelenacaputi

Mariaelena Caputi

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Salzman International

illustration of Throughout the Cincinnati metropolitan area and Northern Kentucky, home prices have skyrocketed in recent years. How can you make it easier to buy a home in this economic climate?
illustration of Plagiarism is an old vice, which has taken on new relevance in the age of artificial intelligence. The big questions that inevitably arise concern what constitutes intellectual theft and what can be considered acceptable borrowing or inspiration.
illustration of Today assets such as wine, great art and glitzy mansions are everywhere. The ultra-rich are therefore spending on bigger and better things; often services, rather than goods.
illustration of Expiring Obamacare subsidies remain a headache for Republicans. What to do about them has become a microcosm of divisions in the Republican coalition, reaching into debates on affordability, concerns about the deficit and even abortion.
illustration of A new analysis of ancient Neanderthal tools has revealed the presence of an unexpectedly sophisticated adhesive. The discovery provides the earliest evidence of a complex glue in Europe and shows that the Neanderthals had a higher level of cognition and cultural development than anthropologists previously thought.
illustration of One of the fastest-growing companies in history is facing a make-or-break year. In fact, despite OpenAI unprecedented fundraising has fuelled unparalleled growth, its losses keep growing.
illustration of A letter from Martin Kimani to the next president of the White House and the American people on the need by radically opposed political groups to create avenues for dialogue to address the new challenges ahead.
illustration of In 2018 the Earth BioGenome Project proposed a moonshot idea of sequencing all eukaryotic life on the planet. But despite its ambition, it has been hindered by serious challenges: gaining funding and establishing an international collaboration of scientists collecting and sequencing species. Achieving this kind of goals requires a complete rethinking of the Nagoya Protocol.
illustration of Not a game.
illustration of HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS (HPV) is an unwelcome consequence of a joyful pursuit. In Britain HPV causes about 3,500 cases of cervical cancer each year and 900 deaths. A vaccination programme that inoculates against the virus—once a runaway success—is floundering. Blame declining confidence, a lack of convenience and rising complacency. How can it be brought back to success?
illustration of Over the coming years housing markets could face all sorts of slings and arrows, from swings in economic growth and interest rates to banking busts. But with the long-term effects of demography, urban economics and infrastructure aligning, in many countries it is plausible that house prices could persistently rise faster than incomes. The world’s biggest asset class is likely to get ever bigger.
illustration of Buyers, sellers and renters are in for more twists and turns, as soaring mortgage rates and stubborn inflation signal belt tightening ahead.
illustration of A New Mother’s Search for Home.

The waiting list for housing in New York City’s Section 8 program — which provides vouchers for rent — has been capped at 10,000 names. It stopped taking applications in 2008. Think about that for a moment. Our government’s primary program to provide affordable housing is so oversubscribed that you can’t even get your name on a waiting list. What’s going to happen in these subsequent months as our unemployment rolls swell? Where will people find shelter?
illustration of The number of treatments for multiple myeloma has dramatically expanded. That’s great news but with so many options, clinicians need better ways to determine which treatment is going to work best for each patient.
illustration of The weight-loss drug explosion has forced a reconsideration of what “healthy” means.
illustration of “One of the cardinal signs of infection is raised body temperature,” says Waleed Javaid (…) It’s unclear if or how the coronavirus might change the use of body temperature as a diagnostic tool. In the near term, Javaid says, knowing your own average temperature and how it fluctuates might help clinicians diagnose and treat some illnesses more accurately.
illustration of High fitness levels are associated with a lower risk of depression and anxiety. (…) “Reports that people are not as active as they used to be are worrying, and even more so now that global lockdowns have closed gyms and limited how much time people are spending out of the house. Physical activity is an important part of our lives and can play a key role in preventing mental health disorders.”
illustration of A visual study about what animate beings and inanimate things have in common.
illustration of Dividing the marital home during a divorce can be a financially and emotionally fraught experience.
illustration of A tribute to Spring, which returns every year to warm our hearts.
illustration of Clearly, wanting to fall in love isn’t a bad thing. But wanting love too badly can lead you to prioritize the act of falling in love over picking the right person.
illustration of Conceptual, Design, Digital, Photoillustration, Concept Art, Food, Lifestyle
illustration of On a typical workday morning, if you’re like most people, you don’t wake up naturally. Instead, the ring of an alarm clock probably jerks you out of sleep. Then you throw out your arm and hit the snooze button, silencing the noise for at least a few moments. It may seem like you’re giving yourself a few extra minutes to collect your thoughts. But what you’re actually doing is making the wake-up process more difficult and drawn out.
illustration of To succeed in these times of economic instability, non-profit organisations need to challenge some of the major dogmas that have dominated the charity space for decades, taking a page from their for-profit peers and learning how to make money.
illustration of Your smartphone can broadcast your exact location thousands of times per day, through hundreds of apps, instantaneously to dozens of different companies. Each of those companies has the power to follow individual mobile phones wherever they go, in near-real time.

That’s not a glitch in the system. It is the system.
illustration of The CEO behind the company that created ChatGPT believes artificial intelligence technology comes with real dangers, but can also be
illustration of The death of the artist: how creators are struggling to survive in the age of billionaires and big tech.

The critic William Deresiewicz considers how we arrived at a situation in which it’s easier than ever to share your creativity with the world, and harder than ever to make a living doing so.
illustration of The use of search engines is causing our brains to reorganize where it goes for information, adapting to new computing technologies rather than relying solely on rote memory.
illustration of The United States has its best opportunity in 150 years to belatedly fulfill its promise as a multiracial democracy.
illustration of The Dominion settlement is disappointing, but our legal system isn’t designed to take down corporate media giants.
illustration of Should the virus reach extreme levels of infection globally, it would very likely be the first true test of the 21st-century way of life, laying bare the hidden fragility of a system that has long felt seamless.
illustration of American startups are competing to bring electricity to communities that remain off the grid.
illustration of Companies have started reappraising and reconfiguring their position in China because the risks and opportunities of doing business there have changed. Their challenge is to maintain access to China’s upsides while managing increasingly complex risks.
illustration of Today’s employees expect their employers to speak out about the social, political, and environmental issues they care about. Businesses can’t weigh in on every issue, but they can create a culture of open dialogue and ethical transparency.
illustration of Taken together, complicity, feminism and the technological boost of a hashtag seem to have made for a perfect storm and a cultural awakening at once.
illustration of Along the way, Mr. Trump played to his conservative base, seeking to divide the nation over race and cultural flash points. (…) Mr. Biden, in response, offered a message of healing that appealed to Americans from far left to center right. He made common cause by promising relief from the unceasing invective and dishonesty of Mr. Trump’s presidency.
illustration of Republicans are bringing the biggest changes to health policy in 15 years.
illustration of “If you don’t like something, change it. If you can’t change it, change your attitude.” – Maya Angelou
illustration of When the U.S. and China fight, it is the environment that suffers.

The Trump administration’s moves to decouple the two economies means less leverage over Beijing’s green policies. (…) When it comes to environmental protection, decoupling is a lose-lose proposition for both countries.
illustration of A letter from Jason Bordoff to the next president of the White House and the American people about the importance of investing in clean energy technologies.
illustration of Decades of studied ignorance, political cowardice, cynical denialism and irresponsible dithering have allowed the problem to grow deeper and immeasurably harder to solve. But today, we are at an important turning point. The changing climate is no longer an abstract threat lurking in our distant future — it is upon us. We feel it. We see it. (…) And with that comes a new urgency, and a new opportunity, to act.
illustration of Microplastics are small enough to be ingested by sea animals, including those that end up on our plates. 70 years of manufacturing plastic later, we are finally starting to see where it all ends up when we toss it.
illustration of The severe weather events that affected Italy in July, splitting the country into two parts, have a name: climate crisis. Climate change, an undeniably anthropogenic effect, is upon us. We should get used to extreme events and expect them to become more frequent and more intense.
illustration of Recent years have seen our world dominated by polarized debates about the risks and rewards of economic interdependence. But this binary approach has never been realistic. To survive and thrive over time, companies and countries will need to embed risk and reward calculations within a broader framework of systemic resilience.
illustration of The constitutional right to abortion has been overturned, but the Garden State remains committed to reproductive rights.
illustration of Women across Iran have bravely taken to the streets to demand liberation from state repression and justice for Masha Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish woman murdered by the morality police.
illustration of Times reporters have obtained decades of tax information the president has hidden from public view.
illustration of How a scholar, advocate, and judge upended the entirety of American political thought.

“The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice,” she said, quoting Martin Luther King, Jr. But it only bends that way, she went on, “if there is a steadfast commitment to see the task through to completion.”
illustration of “The word apology comes from the Greek apologia, which means justification, explanation, defense or excuse. A key part of apology, perhaps, is really listening to the victim’s experience, taking that in deeply and trying to create a process of repair.”
illustration of Dr. Sahar Yousef, a UC Berkeley-trained cognitive neuroscientist and recently turned strategic consultant to businesses and startups, shares a few tips on how to break through the noise and structure your day — and mind — for higher productivity. Spoiler alert: Quit your multitasking habits now.

Profile

Mariaelena Caputi studied Fine Arts, Graphic Design and Multimedia in Rome, Milan and Salamanca. Her professional activity moves between Illustration and Design. Through a conceptual and multidisciplinary approach, she creatively blends different media such as photography, illustration and everyday objects, always looking for the best way to bring ideas to life.

Style/Techniques

Animation, Collage, Conceptual, Cut Paper, Design, Digital, Graphic, Montage, Photoillustration, 3-D Rendering, Concept Art

Subject/Specialties

Action, Animals, Charts, Corporate, Editorial, Family, Food, Futuristic, Health, Leisure, Medical, Music, Nature, People, Political, Portrait, Product, Religious, Science, Scientific, Technology, Food/Beverage, Lifestyle, Vintage / Retro, Feminine, Environmental, Financial