
< 2025 Failure Conference Poster >
KAIST announced on the 31st of October that it will be holding the '3rd Failure Conference' from Wednesday, November 5th to Friday, November 14th. The event is organized by the KAIST Center for Ambitious Failure (Director Sungho Jo), and, under the theme 'AI times Failure,' it will re-examine the value of humaneness through the sensibility of 'failure' in this era of great transformation led by AI technology.
Composed of lectures, competitions, exhibitions, and networking programs, this conference provides a venue for new introspection on the relationship between humanity, society, and technology through the lens of 'failure.'
Failure Seminar 'AI Era, Asking the Way of Humanity' will be held on November 6th at the Jeong Geun-mo Conference Hall in the Academic and Cultural Complex
Professor Juho Kim of the KAIST School of Computing will discuss the human sensibility and resilience needed in the AI era through the paradox that "AI learns how to fail less, but humans are losing the opportunity to fail. Following this, Professor Sang Wook Lee of the Hanyang University Department of Philosophy will present philosophical and ethical challenges and practical directions for the advancement of AI technology to lead to universal welfare for humanity. The 'AI times Failure Idea Contest' Finals will take place on November 7th at the John Hanner Hall in the Academic and Cultural Complex. 12 teams, selected from preliminaries that included 111 teams from universities and graduate schools nationwide, will demonstrate their ideas in booth form on the theme of 'The Future where AI and Humans Coexist.' Participants will explore AI errors, human limitations, and the possibility of trust and recovery, presenting attempts to convert technological failure into human introspection, and human failure into technological possibility. On the day of the finals, the Grand Prize (KAIST President’s Award), First Prize, and Second Prize will be selected through judging.
The Photography Exhibition '404: Perfection Not Found' will be held on the 1st floor of the Creative Learning Building from November 5th to 14th. This exhibition showcases 'Scenes of Imperfection' captured by KAIST members through the PhotoVoice program and the AI times Failure Snapshot Challenge. It is divided into three sections: ▲ Brain that Mimics Perfection: Failure of AI ▲ Incomplete Connection: Portrait of the Digital Generation ▲ Aesthetics of Imperfection: Warmth of Humanity, providing a space for introspection that illuminates human responsibility and potential through technological failure. The 'Show Off Your Failed Project Contest,' which has garnered great response from KAIST students every year, will be expanded to include general public participation on the 5th at the John Hanner Hall in the Academic and Cultural Complex. Co-planned by the KAIST Center for Ambitious Failure and the student club ICISTS, participants will decorate their own booths with photos and videos to share their failures and the process of overcoming them. Awards such as ▲ Best (Most Votes) ▲ Shining Debris Award (Highly Relatable Failure Story) ▲ Flower of Ash Award (Overcoming Story) ▲ Aesthetics of Failure Award (Creative Expression) ▲ Beautiful Afterimage Award (Sincere Lingering Impression) will be selected through audience voting.

< 2025 Show Off Your Failed Project Contest Poster >
Sungho Jo, KAIST Center for Ambitious Failure (Professor, School of Computing), stated, "As AI technology rapidly evolves and changes the order of the world, humans need to look back at themselves beyond that speed. I hope this Failure Conference will be an opportunity to rediscover the meaning of humaneness amid technological innovation and to imagine a better future." Kwang Hyung Lee, President of KAIST, said, "Failure is another name for challenge, and a seed of innovation. KAIST will lead the AI era and human-centered technological development through a creative spirit of challenge that is not afraid of failure."
All programs for the 2025 Failure Conference are open to anyone interested, and detailed schedules and content can be checked on the webstie of KAIST Center for Ambitious Failure (caf.kaist.ac.kr).
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