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How do you tell when something is AI art?
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<blockquote data-quote="Cergorach" data-source="post: 9268555" data-attributes="member: 725"><p>In the same way you hire anyone else... Or do you, when you hire an IT admin, first not give the IT admin any access to your IT systems and you first get to 'know' the IT admin for a year? You look at an artists previous work, you check references, you interview someone, you sign contracts. Or do you also throw every text your writer produces through a plagiarism checker? Do you look over the shoulder of your layout artist to see if he's actually doing the work and not subcontracting? I've worked in IT under such conditions and that is NOT a healthy work environment (literally looking over your shoulder)...</p><p></p><p>Also as Morrus said three months ago, artists generally first provide sketches during the process:</p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.enworld.org/threads/ai-art-removed-from-upcoming-terminator-rpg-book.701719/post-9225045[/URL]</p><p></p><p>Some people are <em>obviously </em>concerned about the ethics of using AI art, Morrus is one of those (as he has mentioned in other threads). So I'm seriously curious why it's important how to tell AI art apart from 'other' art? His own artists he 'controls' as he insists on a collaborative process... So is this to detect AI in other people's products that don't disclose that? Not that they are required to... But to what point? Or is it to stop repeating fake 'news' articles that claim up and down that something is AI art by the AI Art Inquisition and turn out to be wrong? <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" alt="😇" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f607.png" title="Smiling face with halo :innocent:" data-shortname=":innocent:" loading="lazy" width="64" height="64" /></p><p></p><p></p><p>I didn't, because AI art isn't a crime, nor is delivering AI art for an art project a crime, unless it's contractually determined that the art should not be AI created, then it <em>might </em>be fraud.</p><p></p><p>But I at least took the time to give my answer to your question, you did not do the same of answering my question...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Cergorach, post: 9268555, member: 725"] In the same way you hire anyone else... Or do you, when you hire an IT admin, first not give the IT admin any access to your IT systems and you first get to 'know' the IT admin for a year? You look at an artists previous work, you check references, you interview someone, you sign contracts. Or do you also throw every text your writer produces through a plagiarism checker? Do you look over the shoulder of your layout artist to see if he's actually doing the work and not subcontracting? I've worked in IT under such conditions and that is NOT a healthy work environment (literally looking over your shoulder)... Also as Morrus said three months ago, artists generally first provide sketches during the process: [URL unfurl="true"]https://www.enworld.org/threads/ai-art-removed-from-upcoming-terminator-rpg-book.701719/post-9225045[/URL] Some people are [I]obviously [/I]concerned about the ethics of using AI art, Morrus is one of those (as he has mentioned in other threads). So I'm seriously curious why it's important how to tell AI art apart from 'other' art? His own artists he 'controls' as he insists on a collaborative process... So is this to detect AI in other people's products that don't disclose that? Not that they are required to... But to what point? Or is it to stop repeating fake 'news' articles that claim up and down that something is AI art by the AI Art Inquisition and turn out to be wrong? 😇 I didn't, because AI art isn't a crime, nor is delivering AI art for an art project a crime, unless it's contractually determined that the art should not be AI created, then it [I]might [/I]be fraud. But I at least took the time to give my answer to your question, you did not do the same of answering my question... [/QUOTE]
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