Charlaquin
Goblin Queen (She/Her/Hers)
That’s just not accurate. For one thing, you can photograph things that aren’t art. Moreover, photography itself is an art form. A camera does nothing on its own, a photographer must manipulate the camera, the lighting, the environment, etc. to produce an entirely new piece of art, which may or may nod include another artist’s work. Certainly that raised questions about copyright, but it would be silly to suggest that photography is inherently unethical. In contrast, with image generation algorithms, the image cannot be anything other than a recombination of existing artwork, and the algorithm does all the work of combining those works on its own. The human provides nothing but a prompt.Fundamentally, everything you've said here (and, AFAICT, previously in this thread) are exactly the same thing a painter would say about a photograph. A photograph doesn't make art, it only takes an image of what's already there. A photograph of a building or dancer extracts value from the existing artist's labor without compensating those artists.
Photography's built in purpose is to take the livelihoods of people who paint pictures.

But photographers are people, and they don’t even compete directly with other visual artists.Camera's aren't people, painters are people.
Cyanide is a chemical…Heck, you could even claim that cyanide is inherently unethical if you wanted to.
Not at all. I think those conversations are important to have, and I would not stop anyone from having them. Algorithmically generated images can be unethical and be important to discuss, because of the tremendous effect they will have on the world. Hopefully by discussing it, we can meep the harm they will do to a minimum.Photography significantly changed the way we deal with copyright law (and we're still dealing with the details today). But it also created a new field of art. So will AI. And AI also brings it's own set of copyright and other questions. But this absolutism about ethics is simply an appeal to emotion that addresses only the smallest reality of how AI will inevitably effect the real world. Trying to paint AI as black and white can only serve to stifle conversation about important issues.