But because you have made your art publicly viewable, it is quite apparent that it has been used to educate, train, inspire or simple influence one other artists who then created a piece of art after they were enhanced by your artwork. Yet apparently none of them have paid you for helping them become better artists, and I do not see you complaining about them.
You seem to think that looking at a piece of art is comparable to training yourself to be an artist. You know that isn't true, and I'm growing weary of the entire line of discussion.
No, that's not how anything works, not art, not civil engineering, not menial labor. A person creates or does something that has value to another person, and that second person then decides to pay the artist, creator , laborer. Just because I create art, design a waste water treatment plant, or clean up a park does not entitle me to be paid for that work.
Here's how freelance art is done.
You decide you want a piece of art. You contact several artists, set up an interview, and ask to see their sample portfolio. They come in, show you some samples of their stuff, and you pick the artists whose style and skill match the project you want. You solicit estimates from those artists, and then choose the best artist with the best price. You negotiate, draw up a contract, you both sign it, and
only then does the artist create anything for you.
So yes, if the artist is under contract to create something for you, and then creates it, they absolutely are entitled to be paid. If you don't pay, or if they don't deliver, someone is getting sued.
AI trainers are effectively taking every artist's sample portfolio, scanning it, and then using Photoshop to manipulate it after the artists leave the interview. Why? I think it's to avoid having to sign a contract with those artists...because without a signed contract, they believe they don't have to pay them.