Noah Levenson (New York, 1981) is an American programmer and artist.
Levenson's field of research is heterogeneous and various: in addition to the Stealing Ur Feelings project, he has also worked in the videogame industry (participating with Nintendo in the development of collision dynamics for Mario Kart Live), he has made an interactive film titled Weird Box, has developed a fake app to make fun of the "bro culture", as well as having dealt with technology at various levels for various newspapers and as a guest lecturer at universities such as NYU.
Noah Levenson's work has been the subject of articles in several trade magazines, such as Scientific American and Engadget. He has been interviewed about the artificial intelligence by Report, on Rai3, and CBC Radio One. He also writes research articles for The American Prospect, Daily News and McSweeney's. In 2019 he created Stealing Ur Feelings, an interactive project with which he won the Mozilla award for the art and defense of AI. The work was also awarded at the Tribeca Film Festival and exhibited at the Tate Modern, as well as being studied in various other contexts, such as MIT and the Museum of the Moving Image.