Frequently Asked Questions
We’re gathering self-determined stories as a way to build datasets from the ground up—datasets rooted in care, specificity, and the multitudes of human experience. These aren’t just stories. They’re interventions—acts of refusal against systems that flatten, erase, or misrepresent us. We believe the people most impacted by technology should also shape the foundations of it. If we don’t, who will?
Your contribution becomes part of a data commons—created by and for the public—that helps train experimental AI models made with values of care, transparency, and community input. The system doesn’t just consume your story; it reflects it back to you through generative visuals and shared dialogue. None of this is for commercial use. It’s for collective insight and critical play.
Absolutely not. We believe everyone has expertise—on their lives, cultures, fears, and futures. This work is designed for people who’ve never thought about AI, who are skeptical of it, or who are deeply curious. Your presence here is the expertise. Together, we demystify the system by touching it, talking to it, resisting it, and remaking it.
AI is not neutral. It inherits and amplifies the histories and hierarchies encoded into its training data. By contributing stories that speak from the margins, the silenced, the overlooked—we challenge that foundation. This isn’t about fixing AI by adding “diverse voices.” It’s about reimagining the systems entirely, from the data up, with community consent and care at the center. This is a living model for how justice might live in our technologies.
We’re not looking for perfect narratives—we’re looking for truths. Stories that speak to how you move through the world, what you fear, what you love, what you hope for. The unpolished, the fragmented, the poetic and the practical. Every offering contributes to a more nuanced collective archive of being.
We handle all contributions with reverence and radical care. Your story—your data—is anonymized, randomized, and stripped of identifying information before it enters the system. We don’t extract; we reciprocate. We don’t collect; we co-create. You’re invited to share only what you feel good about releasing to the world, knowing it will help challenge the dominant stories machines are learning to tell.
The lab is a container—for reflection, creativity, and resistance, equal parts sculpture, studio, and salon housed in an upcycled shipping container collaboratively created by Dinkins and LOT-EK. Here, you can share your story, see how AI interprets it, and ask deeper questions about what this technology reflects and what it leaves out.
Because silence is not an option. Because systems are being built with or without us—and the stakes are too high to stand by. This is the first chapter of The Stories We Tell Our Machines, a body of work that insists artists, neighbors, and communities—not just engineers—must shape the systems that are shaping us. If we don’t show up and make different futures possible, who will?
Yes. The energy costs of large-scale AI systems are real and urgent. That’s why this project resists the logic of “scale at all costs.” Our models are bespoke, intentionally small, and experimental. We choose care over speed, local over global, and nuance over dominance. Environmental justice is inseparable from technological justice—and both must start with community, not capital.