@chloeraccoon @sable @patterfloof EXACTLY, Chloe. I love my human housekeeper. She puts things away where it makes SENSE. My human shopper makes brilliant substitutions. Emails are better when humans have time to think before hitting send. AI is fine for image recognition, but keeping a sentient in the action loop almost always gives better results...
PEOPLE. We get the job done.
@stonebear @chloeraccoon @sable @patterfloof
Your housekeeper has an exceptionally rare skill. Never let them go.
@pericat Sadly, we'll have to let ours go, as we're leaving.... but fortunately it'll be in good time, b/c she's planning to leave here then too.
But yeah. Not letting her go until I absolutely HAVE to; she's been completely stellar.
@chloeraccoon @sable @patterfloof
I mean, I’ve never yet met a human cleaner who can refrain from putting things in bizarre and incomprehensible places.
@ainmosni @sable That’s simply not true. The overwhelming vast supermajority of AI work goes towards the types of things you’re asking it to.
You’re misinterpreting visibility for prevalence. It’s hard for articles targeted at the mainstream to interest people in “vacuum cleaner AI”, but it’s easy to show them something whose output is directly visual, so that’s all you hear about, and their investors fan those flames for attention. It’s not at all representative.
Sadly the tech giants seem increasingly uninterested in that stuff.
https://www.theregister.com/2022/12/26/opinion_column_alexa/
@happykhan @sable @david_colquhoun Would be nice.
Different type of problem, but we could also do with local collectives taking over from the likes of Uber/Lyft and Deliveroo/DoorDash, and keeping their 30% or whatever in the local economy.
@Lunatech @sable "No such thing as a 'professional' artist." Seriously? There is no one out there who practices art as their trade? Not a one? No one who draws for commission, no one who does concept art for a living, no one who does graphic design? No one who draws comics, paints portraits, or sculpts sculpture as their main source of income?
I bet all the artists out there who do art for a living are surprised they were unpaid amateurs this whole time!
@Lunatech @sable No, I'm not splitting hairs, because my partner is an artist who does illustration for a living. I've seen how she works with the people commissioning her. They too have creativity and vision, and there's are sometimes rounds of revisions while they hash out details and help her realize what they want to see.
But that doesn't make them the artists, because _they didn't create the art_. She did. It was her skill and effort and time they paid for.
@Lunatech @sable As far as if what the AI image generator is counts as art, tell me this:
What did the AI bring of itself to the process? What did it intend? What did it want to convey? What did it personally bring to the artwork that makes it special? What did the AI want out of it? What was it feeling as it worked on the piece? What memories, what practiced skills did it bring to the work? What feeling did it wish to invoke in the viewer?
@nockergeek @sable Who cares? ART IS IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER. If the AI produces "art" that people enjoy then who cares if it had none of the qualities you would attribute to a human artist? Oh, right, the people who sell art for a living!
What was the human artist feeling when they worked on a piece? Maybe they were wondering how much some gullible rich person would pay for the piece of crap art they were producing, or maybe they were pouring their entire heart and soul into it. You don't know.
@nockergeek @sable Oh, I see now. You have a partner who objects to AI art because they think it will make their art harder to sell. But that is an entirely different debate. That puts you two in the same category as the Luddites who resisted automation because the feared it would cost them their jobs. And yes, that could happen, and maybe in many years everyone will just turn to AI's for their works of art. However you do have some protection, in that right now AI generated art can't be copyrighted, so if a business uses a logo created by AI (as an example) they MAY not be able to protect it.
But anyway as long as you are defending your partner it appears you are incapable of thinking rationally about this subject, and anything I say is probably just going to upset you more. But I don't agree with you.
@nockergeek @sable Oh and I can't let this pass. You said, "AI image generation fans are just either uninterested in learning art or unwilling to pay a human being to do it."
My response is, "so what?" First of all you are painting all AI image generation fans with the same brush, so to speak, but second even where that is true, so what? If it looks like art to them then that's all that matters. You don't get to define what other people consider art, or music, or poetry, or anything of that nature. Where is your outcry when someone puts paint on their dog's feet and let them walk across a canvas, or lets a monkey throw paint at a canvas and calls that art? The people doing things like that didn't "learn art" and they didn't pay a human being to do it, yet somehow things like that are considered art by some people.
@nockergeek @sable Well if you want to start with the insults (and remember YOU started it), you're just someone who has a partner who gets to sit on their ass all day making commercial art rather than doing any kind of meaningful manual labor. Just because they have a talent that some people will pay for makes you think you have the right to define what is and isn't art. So as far as I'm concerned you are both greedy snobs who should be grateful that anyone is willing to pay for art, and should not be acting entitled as if the world owes you two a living.
And with that I am done. I don't know what the goal was of your little tirade but now I see one more benefit of AI-generated art, you don't have to deal with entitled or emotional human artists. So congratulations, you have pushed me even more firmly into the camp of AI supporters.
@sable Actually, this is not asking questions deep enough.
AI art is not the problem, people not getting paid for their contribution in training those AI's is.
We need AI art companies to compensate artists when they use their copyrighted works without asking for permission.
The smarts of AI is not in the technology, it is in the data used to train it.
#AmWriting something about the fundametal issues we are dealing with. #copyright should apply to everyone the same.
https://gimulnaut.wordpress.com/2023/01/13/copyright-wars-pt-2-ai-vs-the-public/