The thing that makes me angry about AI art is that I feel like I'm being led on. I see a fantastic image that speaks to me in some way and that tells me that someone else cared about this image in the way that I care. Someone wanted to draw a loving family of moths, someone cares about little insects like I do.
But if it's just "AI" maybe that person doesn't exist.
There is a huge difference between using AI as a drawing tool, and using it to make junk content to trick people.
@futurebird We're about to discover how much intent matters. Again. Just like we do every time we get a little too excited about technology & start believing it can replace people.
They still chose to ask the AI for that image. They carefully crafted their prompt to fine tune the output. They filtered through its responses and chose the one that best fit their vision. Something about that particular piece resonated in both them and you.
How is that not art? Why let the specter of AI ruin what could otherwise be a beautiful moment?
For millennia art has connected us. The 20th century brought a deliberate effort to disconnect us from ourselves, each other, and from nature. AI generated “art” is a further severance of that connection we have with each other.
In many ways redslug has more right to use AI tools than most of us do. It's their online art that was gobbled up without permission to make the tools. The least they could do is save them some time drawing individual blades of grass.
AI has so much potential to help artists, and some of them are looking for ways to make that happen even as the tech is mostly being packaged as a product to cut artists out of the production process.
@futurebird
I have no illusions. I have no visual artistic talent. None. Zero. My drawings suck.
I do have a great imagination and vocabulary though, and have been able to have AI generate some fantastic images. Do I deem them art? HELL NO.
@futurebird
there's no realistic chance of an image generating model that didn't steal a ton of work; any license curation will reduce the proportion of high-quality images in the dataset, because quality images are more likely to be the work of a person who needs to make a living off their work, and so must be careful about licensing, and reduction in the proportion of high quality work will greatly reduce the quality of images generated, impacting popularity and utility of the model.