The Real America Podcast | Hosted by Elodia Reyna Rojas

The Convergence Age Series, Episode Five Your Identity Is Becoming Data

10 min · 31 de dic de 2025
Portada del episodio The Convergence Age Series, Episode Five Your Identity Is Becoming Data

Descripción

Episode Five of The Convergence Age Series focuses on privacy — not as a setting, but as a system that is rapidly changing. As artificial intelligence becomes embedded into everyday life, identity itself is shifting. Faces, voices, patterns of behavior, and digital history are now usable data. What once felt personal is becoming searchable, reproducible, and transferable. This episode explores how AI is accelerating the collapse of traditional privacy, why identity is no longer just who you say you are, and how power is shifting toward those who understand how these systems work. We talk about: * How identity is being transformed into data * Why privacy is no longer just about what you share * How AI-powered systems are changing exposure, control, and accountability * Why awareness matters more than fear in this new phase This episode is not anti-AI. It is about understanding reality as it is, not as we wish it still were. At the end of the episode, I also share practical AI guidance — how weak questions keep you misinformed, and how better questions reveal what is actually happening globally. This conversation leads directly into the final episode of this season, where we step back even further and examine how AI is reshaping belief, authority, and meaning itself. After recording this episode, I realized there is one critical point I did not emphasize enough — how silence and lack of presence can affect identity in this new environment. I address this briefly in a follow-up, and it connects directly to the themes explored here. #TheConvergenceAge, #AI, #ArtificialIntelligence, #DigitalIdentity, #Privacy, #AIethics, #FutureOfTechnology, #HumanAndAI, #TechAwareness, #DigitalFootprint, #AIandSociety, #TruthInTechnology This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit elodiareynarojas.substack.com [https://elodiareynarojas.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Real America Podcast | Hosted by Elodia Reyna Rojas!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

19 episodios

episode MA ZELT GHAYR MALMOUSA The Moment a Woman Finally Lets Love Reach Her artwork

MA ZELT GHAYR MALMOUSA The Moment a Woman Finally Lets Love Reach Her

There is a particular kind of fear that only appears when love becomes real. It is not the fear of being alone. A woman who has survived, rebuilt, and learned how to depend on herself already knows how to be alone. It is the fear of finally meeting someone who makes her want to stop protecting herself. MA ZELT GHAYR MALMOUSA is that moment. The title means “I Am Still Untouched,” but the emotional meaning goes deeper than physical distance. She has remained emotionally unreachable. She has created a life no one could enter without permission. She has learned how to leave before becoming dependent, how to remain composed before anyone sees how deeply she feels, and how to keep love at a safe distance. Then someone arrives who does not force his way inside. He waits. He remains present. He gives her enough space to decide for herself whether love is still worth believing in. That patience changes everything. THE STORY BEHIND THE SONG MA ZELT GHAYR MALMOUSA comes from my Arabic album AKHIRAN RAFA3T RASA, meaning “Finally, I Raised My Head.” The album follows one connected love story. It is the story of a woman who finds the love of her life later in life, after years of believing that independence was safer than intimacy. She is not waiting to be rescued. She has already rescued herself. She has built a life, developed strength, survived disappointment, and learned how to function without depending on another person. That strength is real, but it has also become a wall. The man who loves her has to understand that loving her will require patience. She is not difficult because she does not feel. She is difficult because she feels deeply and knows what it costs when trust is misplaced. Across the album, each song represents another stage of their relationship. The story moves through resistance, distance, recognition, fear, emotional surrender, and the slow realization that love may still be possible. MA ZELT GHAYR MALMOUSA is one of the most important turning points in that journey. She is no longer denying what she feels. She knows she wants him. She knows something inside her is opening. But she is terrified because allowing love into her life means lowering the same defenses that helped her survive it. The song asks the question many strong women eventually face: What happens when the protection that saved you becomes the very thing keeping love from reaching you? SHE IS NOT AFRAID OF HIM She is afraid of what loving him may require from her. She is afraid of being fully seen. She is afraid of depending on someone who could leave. She is afraid that the person capable of reaching her may also become the person capable of hurting her most. The lyrics hold both truths at the same time. She wants him, and she is afraid. She feels safe with him, and that safety is unfamiliar. She is still standing behind the emotional curtains she closed long ago, but he has found a way into the room without taking anything from her. That distinction matters. This is not a story about a man conquering a guarded woman. It is a story about a woman deciding, in her own time, whether she is finally ready to be loved. DIRECTING THE CINEMATIC VIDEO The official video is not a lip-sync performance. I wanted the visual world to function like an emotional film, with the character carrying the internal tension of the song through her body, her environment, her clothing, her stillness, and the distance between her and the man she is slowly allowing closer. I developed the lead character, shaped her visual identity, selected her wardrobe, constructed the environments, and directed the emotional purpose of each scene. Every visual decision had to support the story. Her clothing could not simply be beautiful. It had to communicate control, femininity, strength, and emotional restraint. The environments could not simply look cinematic. They had to feel like spaces she had built around herself, elegant, protected, and difficult to enter. Her movement could not appear exaggerated. This woman is not performing her pain for anyone. Much of the emotional story exists in what she does not say, how long she waits before responding, and the tension between wanting to move toward love and wanting to protect herself from it. The male presence also had to be directed carefully. He could not dominate the story or appear to take control of her emotional transformation. His role is patience. He gives her room to arrive at the truth herself. This is what I mean when I talk about directing AI. The technology does not decide what the woman has survived. It does not decide why she is afraid. It does not understand why a certain dress, room, glance, pause, or physical distance changes the emotional meaning of a scene. Those decisions belong to the human director. HOW THE PROJECT WAS CREATED I wrote and developed the original song and its emotional story. I created the concept for the album and the connected journey between the songs. I developed the lead character and directed her visual identity. I selected and directed her wardrobe. I designed the environments and cinematic atmosphere. I directed the emotional intention, movement, pacing, framing, and scene progression. I developed the characters using PixVerse. I created and animated the cinematic video using OpenArt. I edited and assembled the final visual story using CapCut. The tools assisted with production, but the authorship, story, emotional architecture, cultural direction, and creative decisions came from me. This distinction is central to my work. I do not approach AI as a button that generates finished ideas. I use it as a production system that must be directed, corrected, restrained, and shaped around an original human vision. WHY I CREATED THIS IN ARABIC Creating music across languages requires more than translating English lyrics word for word. The emotional phrasing must belong naturally to the language. The rhythm has to feel singable. The expressions must sound like something a person from that culture could genuinely say, feel, and carry inside a song. For this project, the Arabic language is not decorative. It is part of the emotional identity of the work. MA ZELT GHAYR MALMOUSA was written to carry intimacy, restraint, fear, and vulnerability through Lebanese Arabic phrasing. The language allows the woman’s fear to feel conversational and immediate rather than distant or overly formal. The goal was never to make an English song sound Arabic. The goal was to create an Arabic emotional world. THE MEANING OF AKHIRAN RAFA3T RASA “Finally, I Raised My Head” represents the moment a woman begins living beyond survival. Raising her head does not mean that every fear has disappeared. It means she is no longer willing to live permanently beneath the weight of what happened before. It means looking forward. It means allowing herself to be visible. It means considering the possibility that love does not always arrive to diminish a woman, control her, or ask her to abandon herself. Sometimes love arrives patiently and waits for her to recognize that she is still capable of receiving it. MA ZELT GHAYR MALMOUSA captures the moment before complete surrender. She has not fully stepped forward yet. But she is no longer pretending she does not want to. That is why this song matters. It honors the woman who is strong enough to survive alone, but eventually becomes brave enough to admit that she no longer wants to. WATCH AND LISTEN The official music video for MA ZELT GHAYR MALMOUSA is being distributed to major music-video platforms, including Spotify, Apple Music, Vevo, Tidal, and Boomplay. The song is part of the album AKHIRAN RAFA3T RASA. CREATIVE CREDITS Created and directed by Elodia Reyna Rojas Lyrics, Emotional Story ArchitectAI Music ArtistCinematic Music DirectorGlobal Creative DirectorLeading Expert in AI Direction and Original Creative Identity TOOLS USED IN THIS PROJECT Create images and cinematic video with OpenArt:https://tolt.link/elodiareynarojas Create with PixVerse:https://motivaiprivatelimited.sjv.io/Agm3qa Edit with CapCut:https://capcutaffiliateprogram.pxf.io/7Xm72Y Affiliate disclosure: Some links in this post are affiliate links. I may earn a commission if you use them, at no additional cost to you. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit elodiareynarojas.substack.com [https://elodiareynarojas.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

23 de jun de 20264 min
episode They Debate Whether AI Threatens Originality. I Am the Proof It Amplifies It. artwork

They Debate Whether AI Threatens Originality. I Am the Proof It Amplifies It.

Eighteen months of building an AI music empire alone, what 1,150 pages of strategic work actually looks like, why I am moving into coding, and the title I built by doing the work first. I have not touched tech since 1991. Today I am moving into coding. Let that sit for a second, because it is the whole story. For the last 18 months, I have been building an AI music empire alone. No team. No mentor. No label. No advertising budget. Just me, AI, and the tremendous amount of questions I ask every single day. The catalog. The tutorials. Seven languages of music. The business. The legal side. The global brand. All directed by me, using AI, while still showing up for my personal life, my son, my health, and my real estate work as a licensed broker. A year ago, I could not handle this much at once. Now I can. The only thing slowing me down is organization. And that is exactly why I am moving into coding. I am Elodia Reyna Rojas. Global Creative Director. AI Music Artist. Cinematic Music Director. And as of this week, I am publicly claiming a title I have spent 18 months earning: the Leading Expert in AI Direction and Original Creative Identity. This article is the long form of three videos I posted yesterday in collaboration with my Claude AI. If you have not seen them, here is the full story. THE COST OF DOING AI AT SCALE Before I show you anything else, I want to be honest about money. I have paid over $350 in the last week alone to Claude AI just to organize my existing data. Not to create new music. Not to make new videos. Just to put my catalog, my project areas, my business documents, and my 18 months of strategic work into a structure that one person can actually navigate. AI is not free at this scale. I wish it was. Most creators hide the actual economics of running AI as a professional tool because it makes them look less self-made. I am doing the opposite. I want you to see what professional-level AI usage actually costs, because that is part of the honesty that separates real AI direction from people who use AI casually and call themselves experts. I also want to be clear that I am not a tech person. I have not touched tech since 1991. I am not a developer. I am not an engineer. Every system I have built has been built by a real person learning to direct AI in her own way. THE SCALE OF WHAT I HAVE BUILT When I sat down with Claude AI yesterday and handed it everything we had been working on across seven weeks in my Command Center project, the numbers came back staggering. 46,516 lines. Over 400,000 words. Roughly 1,150 pages of strategic work. Seven weeks of decisions, refinements, identifiers, brand rules, music direction, business strategy, and creative philosophy. On top of that, my DistroKid sales data showed 227 of my songs generating revenue across 19 different stores in 111 countries, captured in 6,690 individual sales and streams transactions. Underneath all of that, I have 32 supporting documents in this single project area. Business plans. Master status documents. Seven cultural music guides for the seven languages I compose in. Legal documents I have been reviewing. BMI catalog documentation covering 272 registered compositions. Tutorial roadmaps. Media kit. Pricing sheet. Subscription audit. My personal story document. The catalog data for my full body of work. Put together, that is 18 months of accumulated work compressed into one place. And every piece of it came from one person, working alone, with no team, no manager, no label, no advertising budget. That is the scale I am operating at. And it is why the next step has to be coding. WHY CODING (AND WHY I AM NOT BECOMING A CODER) Let me be clear about what I am doing and what I am not doing. I am not becoming a coder. I am not pivoting careers. I am not abandoning my music or my tutorials or my business to learn software development. I am using coding the same way I use AI for music, video, and business strategy. Same method. Tremendous questions. Iterative direction. Stay original. New domain. Here is the thesis that runs through my whole life. AI does not erase human uniqueness. AI exposes it. The same tools millions of people use produce vastly different output when directed by different humans, because each human is shaped differently. My output is exposed because of how I direct. I do not copy templates. I do not borrow prompts. I ask tremendous amounts of questions. I iterate. I dig. I refuse the first acceptable answer. That is my method. That is my originality. Now overlay ADHD on top of that method. ADHD does not slow me down on the creating side. I have proven that. A year ago I could not handle this much. Now I can. What ADHD requires is external order before internal work can land. My nervous system needs to know where things are before it can settle into creating. When the environment is organized, I hold more, do more, build more. This is where coding comes in. At small scale, my brain plus AI is enough. At my scale, after 18 months of compounding work across seven languages, hundreds of songs, dozens of documents, my brain plus AI is not enough anymore. The organization layer needs its own intelligence. That intelligence is code. Code lets me build tools that match my specific brain. Not someone else's idea of a workflow. A system designed around how I actually think. There are apps and tools already built for organization. I do not want those. I want to code something the way I learn, the way my brain needs things organized, according to what I am actually doing. Mine. Not someone else's idea of a workflow. Mine. THE NEW CREATIVE LITERACY For anyone watching, this is what I believe matters going into the next era. The creators who thrive in 2026 and beyond will not be the ones with the biggest teams. They will be the ones who learn enough code to automate their own friction. Not full software engineers. Just enough to build the small tools that make their specific work flow. That is the new creative literacy. That is the floor that originality stands on. This is not me becoming a coder. This is me using AI to learn coding so I can hold what I have built. I used AI to learn how to direct AI. I used AI to build a multilingual catalog, a tutorial series, a business, a podcast, a global brand. Now I am using AI to learn coding so I can manage the empire I have already built. The pattern is the same in every domain. Tremendous questions. Iterative direction. Stay original. Apply the method to whatever needs to be built next. THE TITLE I EARNED I am the Leading Expert in AI Direction and Original Creative Identity. I want to be direct about that title because someone reading this is going to wonder whether I gave it to myself. Yes, I did. And I am not the first. Peter Drucker named "knowledge worker" before there was a clear definition for it. Brene Brown named "vulnerability researcher" before that was a profession anyone respected. Every category creator in history has done the same thing. They identified the work first, then named it, then defended the name with output until the name became the standard. That is what I am doing. The title was not given to me. I built it. I am still building it. And here is the thing. When I searched for that exact title publicly, no one else is using it. There are AI Creative Directors. There are AI design experts. There are brand consultants writing about AI direction. But the specific intersection of AI Direction and Original Creative Identity is white space. I am claiming it because I am the first person doing the work that fits that description publicly, and because the existing language did not describe what I actually do. This title is not what I want to be. It is what I already am. THEY DEBATE. I AM THE PROOF. The broader conversation about AI right now is dominated by fear. Whether AI will replace artists. Whether AI will destroy originality. Whether AI is even art. Whether AI is just stealing from real creators. I respect that those questions matter. I just do not engage with them anymore. They debate whether AI threatens originality. I am the proof it amplifies it. I am not learning what AI can do. I am showing it what I can make it do. This is the difference between using AI and directing AI. Most of the people in the public debate are using AI. They put in a prompt and accept what comes out. They have not yet experienced what happens when you treat AI like an actor in your film, an instrument in your orchestra, a medium for your specific expression. They have not yet asked tremendous amounts of questions. They have not yet iterated until the output matches their actual emotion. That is a different relationship with the tool. And it is the relationship I have been building for 18 months WHAT IS NEXT Over the next weeks, I am taking my audience along on the coding journey. Not because they need to become coders either, but because they need to see what it looks like when a real creator with ADHD, no tech background since 1991, and zero outside influence learns to build her own organizational tools using AI. The first project I am tackling is a project area asset tracker. A simple system that shows me which of my 28 project areas have which assets, what is dormant, what is current, what is missing. It is going to be small, but it is going to remove a daily friction that has been eating my creative energy. After that, the catalog database. Then the file organizer. Then the template generator. Each one solves a specific friction. Each one teaches me a little more code. And every step gets documented for the people watching. If you are building something with AI right now, especially alone, this is the conversation we are about to have together. I am posting a lot right now because I am at the start of a new tutorial series. The pace will not stay this aggressive. Going forward, you will see one video every few days, not multiple every day. I am also pacing myself in real life so that I do not burn out the engine that makes all of this possible. The work is the work, but the worker matters too. CLOSING If you have been waiting for permission to do the same thing in your own field, this is it. You do not need a team. You do not need a label. You do not need an advertising budget. You do not need a tech background. You do not need anyone's permission. You need the method. You need the willingness to ask tremendous amounts of questions. You need the discipline to refuse the first acceptable answer. You need the courage to name what you do before anyone else has named it for you. I am the Leading Expert in AI Direction and Original Creative Identity. I built that title alone, with no tech background since 1991, using AI to direct my own creative empire across seven languages, a tutorial series, a business, a podcast, a global brand, and now a coding journey that will let me hold everything I have already built. This is what real AI direction looks like. And there is nothing stopping you from building your own version of it, in your own field, starting today. The conversation about whether AI threatens originality is finished here. I am the proof. Elodia Reyna Rojas Global Creative Director. AI Music Artist. Cinematic Music Director. Leading Expert in AI Direction and Original Creative Identity. #AI #AITools #AIArtist #CreatorSearchInsights #ChatGPT #ClaudeAI #AIDirection #AIEducation #TeachingMethod #LatinaCreator #WomenInAI #SoloCreator #TechTok #LeadingExpert #OriginalCreativeIdentity This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit elodiareynarojas.substack.com [https://elodiareynarojas.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

16 de may de 20268 min
episode The Conversation About AI Most People Are Missing artwork

The Conversation About AI Most People Are Missing

The Conversation About AI Most People Are Missing By Elodia Reyna Rojas AI Music Artist, Cinematic Music Director, Global Creative Director Before people decide whether AI is destroying humanity or changing it forever, I think we need to slow down and ask a deeper question: How does intelligence actually work? Because the more I researched AI, the more I realized this conversation is not only about technology. It is also about humanity itself. And honestly, part of what pushed me into thinking about this more deeply was my own life as a mother. I have two daughters. Same mother. Same home. Same love. Same values. Same environment. Completely different minds. One naturally moved toward art, beauty, emotion, cosmetics, and creativity. The other toward structure, business, logic, and a more corporate way of thinking. Neither one is wrong. Neither one is “better.” They are simply different human beings processing life differently. And that made me start asking questions. If two children can grow up under nearly the same conditions and still become completely unique people, then maybe intelligence was never designed to copy exactly in the first place. That realization changed the way I think about originality, creativity, psychology, and eventually AI. Because one of the biggest misunderstandings in the public conversation right now is the idea that learning automatically destroys originality. But human beings have never worked that way. Musicians learn from hearing music. Writers learn from reading books. Painters study older paintings. Filmmakers study classic films. Children learn language through repetition and observation. Human intelligence has always evolved through patterns, influence, memory, adaptation, emotion, and transformation. If learning from existing information automatically destroyed originality, human civilization would have stopped evolving thousands of years ago. But it didn’t. Jazz evolved into rock. Rock evolved into electronic music. Languages evolved from older languages. Fashion constantly reinvents itself. Art movements influence future generations. Human beings do not simply copy. We interpret. We transform. We personalize. We attach emotion and meaning to what we experience. And that is where this conversation around AI becomes more complicated than most people realize. Because AI did not just learn from books or music. It learned from humanity itself. Human language. Human communication. Human behavior. Human systems. Human culture. Human patterns. Human history. That realization scares people, and honestly, I understand why. There are legitimate fears right now about ethics, ownership, privacy, jobs, misinformation, identity, exploitation, and corporate power. Those concerns are real. But at the same time, pretending AI is some distant future technology that suddenly appeared overnight is also not reality. Most people were already interacting with AI long before this public conversation exploded. Your GPS rerouting traffic. Your Spotify recommendations. Your Netflix suggestions. Your fraud alerts from the bank. Your phone camera recognizing faces and lighting. Your email spam filters. Social media algorithms deciding what you see every day. That is AI already integrated into modern life. And there are different levels of AI systems operating around us. For example, the fraud alert sent to your phone is one visible interaction. But the deeper fraud detection systems banks use behind the scenes to analyze millions of transactions, identify unusual behavior patterns, predict threats, and reduce financial crime are much larger AI infrastructures operating silently underneath everyday life. Most people only see the surface layer. That is why many people feel like AI suddenly arrived when in reality it has been quietly integrating into civilization for years. And while researching all of this, I realized something else important: AI itself is not replacing my thinking. It is helping me expand my thinking. That distinction matters. I am not sitting here blindly accepting whatever technology tells me. I research. I question. I compare. I challenge. I look at psychology, history, creativity, neuroscience, business, ethics, and human behavior together. AI helped me organize information faster and explore questions from multiple angles, but the thinking, interpretation, emotional understanding, and conclusions are still human. Mine. And this is another area where I think people misunderstand AI-generated content. The reason so much AI content feels repetitive right now is not because intelligence itself is repetitive. It is because many people stop too early. The first prompt. The first answer. The first idea. But human creativity has never worked that way. Real creativity keeps refining. Keeps questioning. Keeps redirecting. Keeps adding emotion, memory, taste, life experience, and perspective. That is why two people can use the exact same AI system and still create completely different outcomes. Just like two people can sit at the same piano and write completely different songs. The originality was never only in the tool. The originality is also in the human being guiding it. And I think that is the real conversation humanity needs to start having. Not blind fear. Not blind hype. Responsibility. Transparency. Ethics. Protection. Compensation. Verification. Human direction. Because AI is not going away. It is already integrated into medicine, communication, education, research, transportation, entertainment, business, and global infrastructure itself. The question now is not whether humanity can stop AI. The question is whether humanity will learn how to guide it responsibly without losing itself in the process. Technology should serve humanity, not control it. #AIeducation #ArtificialIntelligence #HumanCreativity #AIandHumanity #Originality #CreativeThinking #Technology #AIethics #FutureOfCreativity #DigitalCulture #CreatorEconomy #TechTok This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit elodiareynarojas.substack.com [https://elodiareynarojas.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

10 de may de 20265 min
episode BEFORE YOU JUDGE AI WATCH THIS FIRST artwork

BEFORE YOU JUDGE AI WATCH THIS FIRST

BEFORE YOU JUDGE AI WATCH THIS FIRST Most people are talking about AI emotionally before they fully understand what it already is. And honestly, I understand why. People are scared about jobs, creativity, identity, privacy, ownership, misinformation, corporations, and what happens to humanity next. Those fears are real. Pretending they are not real does not help this conversation. But something else is also true: AI is not some distant future anymore. It is already integrated into modern life. And whether people realize it or not, most humans were already using AI years before this public conversation exploded. Your GPS rerouting traffic. Your Spotify recommendations. Your fraud alerts from your bank. Your search engine results. Your spam filters. Your phone camera recognizing faces and adjusting lighting. Your social media feeds deciding what you see. That is AI already operating around you every single day. The public usually only sees the surface interaction, not the deeper systems operating underneath modern infrastructure. Hospitals use AI-assisted imaging systems. Banks use AI fraud detection. Airports use AI security systems. Research institutions use AI to process massive amounts of scientific data. Translation systems use AI language modeling. Businesses use AI forecasting systems. Emergency response systems rely on AI-assisted routing and analysis. Most people just finally noticed AI because now they can interact with it directly. And this is where the conversation becomes uncomfortable for some people: AI did not just learn from books or music. It learned from humanity itself. Human language. Human communication. Human emotion. Human systems. Human patterns. Human culture. Human history. But humans learn through patterns too. Children learn language through repetition. Artists study other artists. Writers absorb books and conversation. Musicians learn through listening. Cultures evolve through influence, adaptation, and transformation. That does not make humans fake. And it does not automatically make AI-generated work fake either. The real question has always been: What do you create with what you learned? Because this is the part many people still do not understand: AI is already changing human civilization. Not just pictures. Not just music. AI is helping detect fraud. Helping process medical information. Helping translate languages. Helping researchers analyze data. Helping people with disabilities communicate. Helping businesses organize systems faster than ever before. And for the first time in history, independent creators and small businesses now have access to tools that once belonged only to massive corporations. A person with an idea can now build films, music, education systems, branding, research, design, and global communication from a laptop. That is a massive historical shift. And yes, powerful technology can absolutely be abused. But every major technological advancement in history carried fear too. The internet changed civilization. Television changed civilization. Phones changed civilization. Social media changed civilization. Even electricity changed civilization in ways people feared at first. So the real issue was never intelligence alone. The real issue is responsibility. The real danger is when powerful systems grow faster than ethics, transparency, accountability, protections, and public understanding. The real danger is misinformation. Manipulation. Fake identities. Exploitation. Mass low-effort replication. Corporations using human data without responsibility. Humans losing control of systems they do not understand. That is why protections matter. Transparency matters. Ethics matter. Verification matters. Compensation systems matter. Human originality matters. And this is the part I need people to understand most: Human beings still matter. Human direction still matters. Human emotion still matters. Two people can sit at the same piano and write completely different songs. And two people can use the exact same AI tool and create completely different outcomes. Because the person directing the system still changes the result. That is why I do not teach people to copy prompts. I teach people how to direct AI intentionally without losing their own voice in the process. Because the future is probably not humans versus AI. The future is whether humanity learns how to guide intelligence responsibly without losing itself along the way. Elodia Reyna Rojas Global Creative Director AI Music Artist Cinematic Music Director #AIeducation #ArtificialIntelligence #AIRevolution #AICreator #FutureTech #DigitalLiteracy #AIethics #AIForCreators #OriginalCreator #CreativeTechnology This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit elodiareynarojas.substack.com [https://elodiareynarojas.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

8 de may de 20269 min
episode The Night I Went Live to Practice and Changed Everything, One Hour of Raw Truth About AI artwork

The Night I Went Live to Practice and Changed Everything, One Hour of Raw Truth About AI

I went live to test my setup and ended up delivering one hour of raw truth about AI and your future, unreleased songs, real talk, no script, watch the whole thing because this is the conversation nobody else is having, AI will not make you dumb it will make you dangerous in the best way possible, watch now and share this with someone who is afraid of AI#AImusic [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/aimusic] #artificialintelligence [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/artificialintelligence] #AIrevolution [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/airevolution] #futureofAI [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/futureofai] #AIeducation [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/aieducation] #newmusic [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/newmusic] #latinaartist [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/latinaartist] #AItools [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/aitools] #techeducation [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/techeducation] #machinelearning [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/machinelearning] #AIgenerated [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/aigenerated] #musicproducer [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/musicproducer] #convergenceage [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/convergenceage] #ElodiaReynaRojas [https://www.youtube.com/hashtag/elodiareynarojas] #softfrequency This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit elodiareynarojas.substack.com [https://elodiareynarojas.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

10 de mar de 20261 h 0 min