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The Hyperpersonalized AI Slop Silo Machine Is Here

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The Hyperpersonalized AI Slop Silo Machine Is Here

For a while, I have said that the AI slop endgame, for social media companies, is creating a hyper personalized feed full of highly specific content about anything one could possibly imagine. Because AI slop is so easy to make and because social media algorithms are so personalized, this means that Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, or YouTube can feed you anything they perceive its users to possibly want. So this means that AI slop makers are exploring ever more niche areas of content. 

Case in point: Facebook AI slop about the horrific and deadly Texas flood. Topical AI content about disasters, war, current events, and news stories are at this point so commonplace that they are now sadly barely notable, and AI-powered “misinformation” about horrible events are all over every social media feed I can think of. But as we document our descent into this hellhole, I thought some AI slop surfaced on Bluesky by Christina Stephens was particularly notable:

The Hyperpersonalized AI Slop Silo Machine Is Here

This is slop that shows Louisiana State University football coach Brian Kelly assisting in the Texas floods. Kelly is “famous” in that SEC football coaches are famousish, but he has no real connection to Texas and there is no reason for this content to exist other than the fact that it is being churned out by a Facebook page called LSU Gridiron Glory, which is specifically making AI slop about Kelly and other LSU football figures, including quarterback Garrett Nussmeier and some of his apparent girlfriends. In the grand scheme of things, Brian Kelly is a very minor figure.

This page is churning out slop that includes Brian Kelly’s reaction to last month’s tragic Air India crash and the supposedly amazing line of encouragement he said (this line is never shared, and, of course, the football coach in Louisiana has not had anything to say about a plane that crashed in India). There is slop of Kelly getting his lost wallet returned to him, donating to the homeless, slop of Kelly in the hospital with a rare illness, slop of Kelly being deported by Trump, talking to Apple CEO Tim Cook, and slop of Kelly secretly “paying off the debt owed by a struggling gardener.” The slop is so completely random and specific that I struggle to imagine how one would decide to fill this niche, and, yet, the AI slop economy has done so, anyway. 

The Hyperpersonalized AI Slop Silo Machine Is Here
The Hyperpersonalized AI Slop Silo Machine Is Here
The Hyperpersonalized AI Slop Silo Machine Is Here

My point is that there is no reason for LSU football coach Brian Kelly flood rescue inspiration porn to exist on the internet because it did not happen and because it is so hyperspecific as to seem like there could not possibly be a market for such content. And yet someone has decided that ridiculously niche disaster content would get served up by the algorithm to someone who might interact with it. 

The Hyperpersonalized AI Slop Silo Machine Is Here
The Hyperpersonalized AI Slop Silo Machine Is Here

Then consider that essentially the exact same thing exists, but for fans of the NBC show The Voice. A page called The Voice Fandom is showing AI slop of judge Blake Shelton saving dogs in the Texas flood, Shelton carrying a girl out of a medical clinic in Kerr County, fellow judge Luke Bryan donating to an animal rescue shelter, etc. As we have seen with previous slop factories on Facebook, many of these bizarre images link out to AI-generated “news” websites that are overloaded with ads. There are, surely, thousands of other similar pages that are doing the exact same thing with celebrities big and small, creating an internet where the LSU fans of the world can imagine their coach as first responder or the judge of their favorite TV show as dog savior or whatever. 

Very little of this slop has much engagement on it, but one of the Blake Shelton photos has 18,000 likes and a few hundred comments. Slop has gotten so cheap and easy to produce, and Facebook is so easy to spam, that presumably the return is worth it. In covering these pages for months, I have learned that a single person can operate dozens or hundreds of pages and can keep them filled up with content, and so having something occasionally go viral can be enough to make the entire endeavor financially viable. There was a time a few months ago when I would click through these pages endlessly and marvel at the sheer volume of slop being posted, but the tactic has become so common at this point that we have become almost fully desensitized to it. 

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Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI

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Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI

Yesterday, Silicon Valley trade publication The Information launched TITV, a live-streaming news program. For its first episode, the company’s founder Jessica Lessin interviewed Mark Zuckerberg about his recent attempts to hire AI executives away from other companies for huge sums of money.

It is impossible to say what actually happened in the interview, however, because there were audio problems with the livestream—the Zuckerberg segment was completely silent, giving us a minute and 50 seconds of video of Zuckerberg’s face moving with no sound coming out.

In recent weeks, however, Zuckerberg has really ramped up his rhetoric about “superintelligence,” throwing hundreds of millions of dollars at AI researchers in attempts to hire them at Meta, and beginning work on massive data centers around the country to power his AI. Zuckerberg and Meta have talked endlessly about AI as a game changer, while being unable or unwilling to keep AI-generated misinformation and slop off of Meta platforms.

Meanwhile, there has been increased discussion about the possible power of using AI for journalism, which we have written about extensively. I saw the silent interview with Zuckerberg as both an opportunity to check out the awesome abilities of Meta’s AI, and to test AI tools at a task some of them are supposedly good at—reading lips. If these technologies worked as well as their creators have promised, it might be possible to provide the world with information from The Lost Mark Zuckerberg Interview.

Here is how my experiment went.

Because Zuckerberg was obviously talking about Meta AI, I thought I would try his tool first. I took video from the interview and asked Meta AI to lip read it to tell me what they were saying:

Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI

“I’d love to help! However, I’m a text-based AI and don’t have capability to visually lip read videos,” Meta AI said. It then suggested that I “find a professional lip reader or transcription service that specializes in lip reading videos” or “use automated lip reading software.” 

I then tried to upload still images to see if Meta AI could parse them:

Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI

When I uploaded additional images, Meta AI was also not able to provide any information about what was being said.

I then went to ChatGPT, because Zuckerberg is reportedly offering pay packages of up to $300 million to OpenAI staffers to come work at Meta. I uploaded the 1:50 video and ChatGPT told me “the video processing took too long and timed out.” I then uploaded a 25 second clip and it told me “the system is still timing out while trying to extract frames.” I then asked it to do the first five seconds and it said “even with the shorter clip and smaller scope (first 5 seconds), the system timed out.” I then asked for it to extract one single frame, and it said “it looks like the system is currently unable to extract even a single frame from the video file.” ChatGPT then asked me to take a screenshot of Zuckerberg. I sent it this: 

Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI

And ChatGPT said “the person appears to be producing a sound like ‘f’ or ‘v’ (as in ‘video’ or ‘very’),” but that “possibly ‘m’ or ‘b,’ depending on the next motion.” I then shared the 10 frames around that single screenshot, and ChatGPT said “after closely analyzing the progression of lip shapes and facial motion,” the “probable lip-read phrase” was “This is version.” I then uploaded 10 more frames and it said the “full phrase so far (high confidence): ‘This version is just.’”

Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI

I then decided to try to extract every frame from the video and upload it to ChatGPT.

I went to a website called frame-extractor.com and cut the video into 3,000 frames. After it had processed 700 of them, I tried to upload them to ChatGPT and it did not work. I then decided I would go 10 frames at a time from the beginning of the clip. Even though I sent an entirely different portion of the video and told ChatGPT we were starting from a different part of the video, it still said that the beginning of the video said “this version is.” I continued uploading frames, 10 at a time. These frames included both Lessin and Zuckerberg, not just Zuckerberg.

ChatGPT slowly began to create a surely accurate transcript of the lost audio of this interview: “This version is just that it we built,” ChatGPT said. As I added more and more frames, it refined the answer: “This version is what we’re going to do,” it said. Finally, it seemed to make a breakthrough. “Is this version of LLaMA more powerful than the one we released last year?” the ChatGPT transcript said. It was not clear about who was speaking, however. ChatGPT said "her mouth movements," but then explained that the "speaker is the man on the left" (Lessin, not Zuckerberg, was speaking in these frames). 

I had uploaded 40 of a total of 3,000 frames. Zoom video is usually 30 fps, so in approximately 1.5 seconds, Lessin and/or Zuckerberg apparently said “Is this version of LLaMA more powerful than the one we released last year?” I then recorded this phrase at a normal speaking speed, and it took about four seconds. Just a data point.

Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI
Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI
Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI
Lipreadtest
0:00
/4.973333

I then got an error message from ChatGPT, and got rate-limited because I was uploading too much data. It told me that I needed to wait three hours to try again. 

Saving the Lost Silent Zuckerberg Interview With the Amazing Power of AI

Finally, I did what Meta AI told me to do, and tried a bespoke AI lip reading app. I found one called ReadTheirLips.com, which is powered by Symphonic Labs. This is a tool that people have been trying to use in recent months to figure out what Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein were saying to each other in silent b-roll news footage, without much success.

I paid $10 for three minutes worth of transcription and asked it to lip read using its “Multiface Detection.” After waiting 10 minutes, I got an error message that said “Transcription failed, no credits have been used, try again later.” I then asked it to focus only on Zuckerberg, and actually got some text. I separately asked it to focus on Lessin.

Here is a transcript of what the AI says they were talking about. It has not been edited for clarity and I have no idea which parts, if any, are accurate:

LESSIN: Thanks for joining us again, TV. We're happy to have you already this morning. News that you've spent even more money with your big announcement about your new supercomputers. We'll get to that, but to start, you've been in huge scale like I.

ZUCKERBERG: Happy TO BE HERE. We're GOING TO TALK A LITTLE BIT ABOUT META'S AI STRATEGY. It's BEEN BUSY, YOU KNOW? I THINK THE MOST EXCITING THING THIS YEAR IS THAT WE'RE STARTING TO SEE EARLY GLIMPSES OF SELF-IMPROVEMENT WITH THE MODELS, WHICH MEANS THAT DEVELOPING SUPERINTELLIGENCE IS NOW.

LESSIN: You HAVE BEEN ON A PLANE OF AI HIRING, WHY AND WHY NOW? 

ZUCKERBERG: Insight, and we just want to make sure that we really strengthen the effort as much as possible to go for it. Our mission with a lab is to deliver personal superintelligence to everyone in the world, so that way, you know, we can put that power in every individual's hand. I'm really excited about it.

LESSIN: I DON'T KNOW, I DON'T KNOW, I DON'T KNOW.

ZUCKERBERG: Than ONE OF THE OTHER LABS YOU'RE DOING, AND YOU KNOW MY VIEW IS THAT THIS IS GOING TO BE SOMETHING THAT IS THE MOST IMPORTANT TECHNOLOGY IN OUR LIVES. IT'S GOING TO UNDERPIN HOW WE DEVELOP EVERYTHING AND THE COMPANY, AND IT'S GOING TO AFFECT SOCIETY VERY WISELY. SO WE JUST WANT TO MAKE SURE WE GET THE BEST FOCUS.

LESSIN: Did YOU FEEL LIKE YOU WERE BEHIND WHAT WAS COMING OUT OF LAW BEFORE I'M NOT ADJUSTING.

ZUCKERBERG: On THIS FROM ENTREPRENEURS TO RESEARCHERS TO ENGINEERS WORKING ON THIS HIDDEN INFRASTRUCTURE, AND THEN OF COURSE WE WANT TO BACK IT UP WITH JUST AN ABSOLUTELY MASSIVE AMOUNT OF COMPUTER RESEARCH, WHICH WE CAN SUPPORT BECAUSE WE HAVE A VERY STRONG BUSINESS MODEL THAT THROWS OFF A LOT OF CAPITAL. LET'S TALK ABOUT.

LESSIN: Like THIS SUMMER, PARTICULARLY, YOU SWITCH GEARS A LITTLE BIT.

ZUCKERBERG: I THINK THE FIELD IS ACCELERATING, YOU KNOW, WE KEEP ON TRACK FOR WHERE WE WANT TO BE, AND THE FIELD KEEPS US MOVING FORWARD.

The video ends there, and it cuts back to the studio. I emailed The Information to see if it could provide a version of the interview with audio to check how well the AI performed and to see if it had comment about what happened, but it did not respond.

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mkalus
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Has Zuckerberg actually managed to deliver anything new and exciting since Facebook? It seems he’s mostly been buying up other people’s ideas.

The last attempt “Metaverse” is... Umm, where exactly? And now he’s throwing billions at “AI”. I am getting the feeling he’s the Jim Cramer of business.
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Immigration Raid Tracking App ‘ICE Block’ Keeps Your Data Private, Researcher Finds

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Immigration Raid Tracking App ‘ICE Block’ Keeps Your Data Private, Researcher Finds

ICE Block, an app that lets users warn others about the location of ICE officers, and which for a short while was the top of the social media App Store chart, does protect users’ privacy and doesn’t share your location with third parties, according to a recent analysis from a security researcher. ICE Block already claimed that it did not collect any data from the app; the analysis now corroborates that.

“It’s not uploading your location at all, when you make a report that report isn’t associated with your device in any way, and there are no third party services that it talks to or sends data to,” Cooper Quintin, senior public interest technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), who analyzed the ICE Block app, told 404 Media.

💡
Do you know anything else about this app? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at joseph@404media.co.

ICE Block lets users report nearby sightings of ICE officials. The app launched in April, but skyrocketed in popularity after CNN covered the app in June. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) head Kritsi Noem then said that “we’re working with the Department of Justice to see if we can prosecute [CNN] for that.”

There is no indication that what ICE Block is doing is illegal, nor the coverage of the app. Its App Store page says “Stay informed about reported ICE sightings, within a 5 mile radius of your current location, in real-time while maintaining your privacy.”

Joshua Aaron, ICE Block’s developer, told 404 Media “there are no legal issues with the app. Multiple constitutional and criminal attorneys looked at it before it launched and all agreed this is protected under the First Amendment.”

He added Quintin’s analysis “was great because he confirmed everything we’ve been saying about the app. It is 100% anonymous and we are not collecting or storing any identifiable user information.” Aaron declined to say how much the app was costing to run. He said Apple has not contacted him at all about the app and doesn’t expect them to.

To analyze ICE Block, Quintin said he viewed its network traffic, which would show what data was being transferred or not, viewed logs, and looked up what software libraries were used in the app.

404 Media asked DHS if it had any plans to identify people who have used or downloaded the app, or make any sort of legal demand against Apple for related user data or to take the app down. That would be legally contentious, but DHS Secretary Noem said in a statement “This sure looks like obstruction of justice. Our brave ICE law enforcement face a nearly 700% increase in assaults against them. If you obstruct or assault our law enforcement, we will hunt you down and you will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

404 Media recently reported on a different app called FuckLAPD.com that uses facial recognition to reveal the identity of LAPD officers. The developer of that project also made ICEspy, which is designed to provide the name of ICE officials, but at the time the underlying dataset was out of date.

Update: this piece has been updated to include a statement from DHS.

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a16z-Backed AI Site Civitai Is Mostly Porn, Despite Claiming Otherwise

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a16z-Backed AI Site Civitai Is Mostly Porn, Despite Claiming Otherwise

In the two years that I’ve been reporting about Civitai, a platform for sharing AI image generation models that has been instrumental in the production of AI generated non-consensual porn, Civitai has consistently argued that the amount of adult content on the site has been overstated. But new research shows that, if anything, the amount of adult content on Civitai has been underestimated.

In their paper, “Perpetuating Misogyny with Generative AI: How Model Personalization Normalizes Gendered Harm,” researchers Laura Wagner and Eva Cetnic from the University of Zurich studied more than 40 million user-generated images on Civitai and over 230,000 models. They found “a disproportionate rise in not-safe-for-work (NSFW) content and a significant number of models intended to mimic real individuals” on the platform, they write in the paper.

“What began as a promising creative breakthrough in TTI [text-to-image] generation and model personalization, has devolved into a pipeline for the large-scale production of sensational, biased, and abusive content. The open-source nature of TTI technologies, proclaimed as a democratizing force in generative AI, has also enabled the propagation of models that perpetuate hypersexualized imagery and nonconsensual deepfakes,” Wagner and Cetnic write in their paper. “Several indicators suggest a descent into a self-reinforcing feedback loop of platform decay. These include a dramatic increase in NSFW imagery, from 41% to 80% in two years, as well as the community’s normalization of deepfakes, misogynistic tropes, and other exploitative content.”

To visualize just how dominant adult content was on Civitai, check the chart below, which shows the distribution of images by “NSFW browsing levels” over time. These categories, which are inspired by the Motion Picture Association film rating system and are used by Civitai to tag images, show that adult content was always a significant portion of all images hosted on the site, but that the portion of “overtly sexual, or disturbing” content only grew as the site became more popular, and exploded starting in 2024. The chart is based on Civitai’s own numbers and categorization system which the researchers scraped from the site. It likely undercounts the number of explicit images on the site since as both the researchers and I observed during my reporting, not all adult content is tagged as such. 

a16z-Backed AI Site Civitai Is Mostly Porn, Despite Claiming Otherwise

In December, 2023, Civitai CEO Justin Maier told Venture Beat that “less than 20% of the posted content is what we would consider ‘PG-13’ or above.” When I reached Maier for comment for this article, he told me that “The VentureBeat figure cited a December 2023 snapshot, when adult posts were a minority. The mix shifted in 2024 as many NSFW creators migrated from platforms that no longer allow that content.”

However, the data in the paper shows that by October of 2023, 56 percent of all images on the site were tagged as “NSFW” and were designated by Civitai as “PG-13” or above.

In May, Civitai announced it’s banning all AI image generation models designed to recreate the likeness of real people because of pressure from payment processors. Since the authors of the paper were already tracking hundreds of thousands of models hosted on Civitai, they could easily see which models were removed, giving us a first clear look at how common those models were. 

Overall, they saw that more than 50,000 models designed to AI-generate the likeness of real people were removed because of the ban. These are models that Civitai itself tagged as “person of interest,” the tag it uses to indicate a model recreates the likeness of a real person, so the actual number of models depicting real people is likely higher. 

It’s hard to say if the most popular AI models on Civitai were all popular just because they were used to generate explicit images, because people could use models tagged as NSFW to generate non-nude images and vice versa. For example, according to the data collected by the researchers the most popular AI image generation model on Civitai was EasyNegative with almost 600,000 downloads. It’s not tagged or promoted as a model for generating pornography, but images that users created with it, which are shared on its Civitai model page, show it is commonly used that way. 

Other very popular models on Civitai are clearly designed to generate explicit images. The sixth most popular model with 360,000 downloads is Nudify XL: Better Bodies, which its creator says is for “nude female frontals.” A model called Realistic Vaginas - God Pussy 1 had 256,000 downloads. The POV Squatting Cowgirl LoRA model, which Civitai tagged as a “sex” model, had 189,000 downloads. 

a16z-Backed AI Site Civitai Is Mostly Porn, Despite Claiming Otherwise

The authors of the paper also conducted deeper analysis of the 40,000 most downloaded models on Civitai. In the 11,151 models where they could extract textual training data, meaning text that indicates what kind of images the models were trained on, they found “specifically abusive terms.” 5.6 percent included the keywords “loli” (558 models) and/or “shota” (69 models), Japanese terms commonly used to refer to sexualized depictions of pre-pubescent girls and boys. About 2.1 percent (189 models) included the keyword “rape.”

The data shows with clear numbers what we have long argued at 404 Media: adult content drives technological innovation and early adoption, and this has been especially true in the world of generative AI. Despite its protestation to the contrary, Civitai, which is one of the fastest growing platforms in that industry, and that the influential Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz invested in, grew because of explicit content, much of which was nonconsensual. 

“The rapid rise of NSFW content, the over-representation of young female subjects, and the prioritization of sensational content to drive engagement reflect an exploitative, even abusive dynamic,” the researchers wrote. “Additionally, structural discrimination embedded in today’s open-source TTI tools and models have the potential to cause significant downstream harm as they might become widely adopted and even integrated into future consumer applications.” 

Adult content driving innovation and early adoption doesn’t have to be harmful. As the researchers write, it’s the choices platforms like Civitai make that give us these outcomes. 

“The contingent nature of technology, shaped by online communities, platform operators, lawmakers, and society as a whole, also creates opportunities for intervention,” they write. “Model-sharing hubs and social media platforms both have the capacity to implement safeguards that can limit the spread of abusive practices such as deepfake creation and abusive imagery.”

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The Bon Jour Unplugged by Philippe Starck Wears a Crown Well

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The Bon Jour Unplugged by Philippe Starck Wears a Crown Well

Cute, cordless, and now more portable than ever, the Bon Jour Unplugged 2025 Edition table lamp by Philippe Starck for Flos offers a technological enhancement of the original design – with a sleek color refresh as well. A take on his lamp from 2015, the Bon Jour Unplugged celebrates the 10th anniversary of the Bon Jour by offering all the simplicity, elegance, and charm of the original, with a modern update for the inside and outside. With Color Tune technology unique to the piece, warmth can be adjusted as well, from a warm glow to a bright white.

A modern copper table lamp with a clear shade sits on a marble surface, with gold curtains in the background.

“A hopeful companion to carry around, with warmer and longer-lasting light to brighten up the future days to come,” Starck says. “The Bon Jour Unplugged has a discreet elegance, now also joyful with its sentimental colors.” The new body colors include Almost White, Faded Blue, Fresh Mint, French Rose, Stormy Grey, Black Chrome, Copper, and Chrome. This varying level of finishes keeps decision overwhelm at a minimum, allowing the crowns to let the personality shine in. Previously, the Bon Jour Unplugged offered the signature transparent crown as an added accessory – for the 10th anniversary edition, the crown comes standard. Of course, the Bon Jour Unplugged could always be left without a crown, but there’s simply no fun in that. If you want to mix it up, four diffuser colors, including Amber, Fumeé, Fabric, and Rattan, allow for extra levels of customization.

Five modern table lamps in different colors are arranged in a row on a glossy black table with dark leather seating in the background.

The latest edition of the Bon Jour Unplugged blends convenience and sleek design with its fully wireless build, crafted from durable ABS and PMMA. It runs on a rechargeable lithium-ion battery and now includes built-in Qi wireless charging, so it can easily power up on any standard induction charging pad – no cables necessary. For added flexibility, it also supports USB-C charging. Once fully charged, the lamp delivers up to six hours of uninterrupted illumination.

A metallic table lamp is lit on a mantel next to a dried branch, a candlestick, a glass jar, and a painted canvas. Dried flowers are visible in the lower part of the image.

A key new feature of the Bon Jour Unplugged is its integrated Color Tune light technology, which gives users intuitive control over both the color and intensity of the light. By simply pressing and holding the optical sensor, the lamp’s glow can be fine-tuned from an ultra-warm 2200K to a bright, crisp 3000K. Whether you’re setting the mood with soft, ambient light or need clearer illumination for tasks, the lamp adjusts seamlessly. Brightness can also be toggled between four levels – 3%, 30%, 70%, and 100% – with the same touch-sensitive control.

A lit table lamp on a stone mantel, accompanied by dried leaves, a small figurine, a glass jar, and a colorful painting of leaves in the background.

A modern white table lamp with a clear lampshade is illuminated on a glossy surface, surrounded by rectangular and square concrete blocks.

Each piece of the lamp, from battery, to charging station, to the lights themselves, can be fixed with spare parts available directly from Flos. In an era where fixing and tinkering is not only discouraged, but illegal on many products, this is a welcome respite to a hyper-consumptive culture.

A small white lamp and two books rest on a round dark table outdoors, with an ornate stone bench and greenery in the background.

A modern table lamp is illuminated on a glass surface near an open book; animal figurines are visible on a shelf in the background.

Philippe Starck is a designer that believes something should be useful before it is beautiful. An iconic career, his work lives in the halls of museums across the globe, his creations among the tens of thousands, released or otherwise. With a signature amorphous style and a candid approach to life, he continues to challenge the unconsciously upheld notions within design. “If there is no vision, humane, social or loving, a project doesn’t have the legitimacy to exist,” says Starck.

A modern table lamp with a transparent shade is lit on a reflective surface next to a green and blue striped glass and a small plate. Shelves with dishes are visible in the background.

Flos continues to push the boundaries of high-end lights and advanced lighting systems. Founded in 1962, Sergio Gandini began to manage the brand in 1963. He saw no contradiction between imagination and business project, spurring a “think tank” type of design philosophy. As this was relatively new within the industry, Flos has championed the power of collaboration for over sixty years, working with influential designers such as Konstantin Grcic, Philippe Starck, and Achille Castiglioni.

A man with glasses holds a modern table lamp, illuminating his face in a dimly lit hallway.

Philippe Starck with Bon Jour Unplugged lamp \\\ Photo: Marco Cella

To learn more or to purchase the Bon Jour Unplugged 2025 Edition by Philippe Starck for Flos, visit flos.com. The French Rose, Stormy Grey, and Almost White colorways are exclusively available at lumens.com.

Photography courtesy of Flos.

This post contains affiliate links, so if you make a purchase from an affiliate link, we earn a commission. Thanks for supporting Design Milk!

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