LordEntrails
Hero
As I've asked many times and have even tried to suggest some points. What is this path you see? Destroying the machines like the Luddites did won't work. So what do you see the future to hold and how to get there?I know its hard to see now, but there is a better path for our current society. We do not need to race to the bottom with AI generated content that people could, and should, be paid a living wage for.
Have you ever participated in the growth and learning of an infant? Same thing. AI is still just an infant.Given they can only regurgitate what they have been shown, and often verbatim, it is clearly a different circumstance than a human taking inspiration from another creator.
Please explain.There is a big difference between "drawing inspiration from" something and "actively taking something without permission."
This is an interesting point. The farmers certainly were, but were the laborers in the fields who lost their jobs? What about the wash women? Of course, now we often wash out clothes after a single day of wearing them, not a few months.Also, I'm pretty sure that most farmers are OK with tractors replacing their labor, and most families are OK with laundry machines replacing their labor, and so on. How many actual artists and writers are OK with AI replacing them?
I don't know, how much of your words are original and not re-hashing of what someone else wrote at another time and place? Our words and thoughts might be original in that I have not said them in this form before, but it is unlikely they are unique and have not been said in near identical fashion by someone sonewhere at some time in the past.And in this hypothetical, how much of the final product is going to be original and how much will be AI?
Why should I want to learn and improve upon a skill I don't want to learn? There are many things I can spend my time on. Why would I want to learn a skill that may well be mostly obsolete in a few years?That's another bad thing about AI: you're using it as an alternative to actually learn and improve.
But I don't.You want to learn how to draw? You need: something to draw with and something to draw on.
Ok, but why would I want to spend my time doing that?All you need is time.
Do you see the re-occurring issue here? Yes their is an idealist altruistic value in learning an artistic skill. But their has to be worth or value in doing so to the person investing their time to learn that skill. Do you understand that many people don't want to make that investment? Especially when their are tools they can get something good enough?
Sure, but why should your standards be forced upon everyone? Maybe some folks are happy with a $0.99 taco that's ready in 2 minutes and not one for $14.99 that take s45 minutes to come to your table.To me, a company using AI would be about as tacky as if they used nothing but a box of cheap clip art, like the type they used to sell in boxes of CD-ROMs at Staples. Cheap junk that isn't worth whatever the company is trying to charge for it.
And how is spending hundreds of hours to learn to do something wise if you can get something acceptable in a minutes? Sure, if you are going to end up faster, better, etc then you can say their is a return on investment and spending your time learning that skill is wise. But...?What I said is simple: Folks have a choice with what to do with their time. Spend it wisely.
I certainly don't think I put any words in your mouth, I certainly didn't intend to. And I used the term "worth", not "Monetary "Value"". Not all worth is measured in monetary value.I never placed any monetary "value" on art in my previous statement, as the emphasis of the post was on appreciating what little time you have on this earth (but I guess you glossed over that part).
I'm familiar with artists going back to the 1980s who have refused to put their art on the internet, or even allow people to take pictures of their work at shows. Most of them are still unknown.And yeah, this is happening, I know a lot of people are these days reluctant to post their art online.