@lettosprey is using existing art to train AI really stealing? Is what AI does, so fundamentally different from what art has always done?
Taking inspiration, remixing, deriving has, at least when it comes to art for economical gain, always been the norm and the occasional spark of genious that brought something radically new, never before seen, that moves a whole field forward, the rare exception.
To me, the discussion and the arguments around AI echo those of similar revolutions. Like the invention of (relatively cheap) paper, the printing press, the photographic process, the talking movie, the phonograpic record, the music cassette, etc. have always been decried as the end of something fundamental but reliably turned out to be the starting point of something new.
Yes, the cycle is steadily accelerating and yes, AI will mean the loss of income for many, not only in art, but has anything good ever come from resistance to that kind of change? Is there any indication that this time things will be different?