• potentiallynotfelix@lemmy.fish
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    7 days ago

    Art is dead, dude. It’s over. A.I. won. Humans lost.

    He made the art shown below. It’s not even good lmao, why the fuck would you declare something like that if you make the shittiest looking AI art. What a fucking clown.

      • exocortex@discuss.tchncs.de
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        6 days ago

        Well in a way all Art is being done indirectly by some sort of instrument. Only the degree of sophistication or degree of separation of this instrument is different. A pencil drawing is in principle also done by the pencil, but I provided a lot of guidance through my hand. A pencil - almost no sophistication - is on one side of the spectrum and Midjourney/Stable Diffusion etc is on the other side of the spectrum.

        I don’t want to judge AI “art” in general - there’s so many awful traditional artworks that AI art doesn’t really stand out.

        What rubs me the wrong way is that it is a tool that no human can understand reasonably well. Everybody can understand a pencil. It’s possible to understand a computer renderer that renders digital art. But no one can understand the totality of an LLM which was trained on terabytes of images. It’s a lot of trial and error, because what the tool does generate random images even with precise directions. It’s throwing dice until one likes the result.

        The one thing I give this “artist” credit for: he was very early (maye even the first?) that entered AI art into a contest and fooled the jury. Being the first is often enough historically to make “great art”. Where art is more measured n the impact it has on a societal discussion. So I give him that.

        But a court already decided you can’t copyright AI art, because it’s trained on other art without permission. So he can get fucked.

        • Wogi@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          The pencil does not make the art.

          There’s a fundamental difference between AI image generation and an artist creating something that is both inherent and obvious.

          If you can’t see that then I’m not sure there’s much help for you.

          More than that, art being created by an artist has a style and a feeling behind it. There’s a nostalgia present in every painting. An artist saw something, and recreated it in a way that spoke to them.

          An algorithm can recreate images that look similar but with no understanding. It’s just an image and lacks all the things that makes art what it is. By removing humanity from art you literally remove the reason for it to exist.

          Flatly, it isn’t art. It’s slightly better than random. But as it happens, humans are better at that too.

      • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        That doesn’t bother me as much as when you actually zoom in on the people

        Normally you paint somebody, you do so in a recognizable pose standing or caught in a frame stance that implies their motion.

        Here you have someone presumably looking at the orb, But they look more like a weeble wobble. Is that their tiny little arm holding there ear? They’re not balanced, I’m not even sure the head is connected to the neck there should be meat back there right? The raw proportions are just wrong.

        The overall feeling the piece conveys is pretty impressive but the actual details are bullshit.

    • affiliate@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      i think “content creator” would be a better term in this case. because i’m not convinced it’s art, but it sure is “content”. maybe “content requester” would be more accurate.

  • EnderMB@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    It’s probably a safe bet that this AI artist was also a NFT artist or procurer a few years ago.

  • Yerbouti@sh.itjust.works
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    7 days ago

    In 2021 I made a sound installation project called "Opéra Spatial " and entered a bunch of public prompt in mid-jouney via discord to generate images for the work. This guy made his image on year later.

  • ⚛️ Color 🎨@lemm.ee
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    6 days ago

    He cannot copyright it because he didn’t make it. He wrote a couple of words into a text box. It’s no different from commissioning an artist to draw for you, except in this scenario it is analogous to the artist turning out to be someone who traces other people’s art without their consent, and claiming you made the picture.

  • Coskii@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    6 days ago

    One of the very firest things I looked into when I learned about midjourney was look into the copyright matters pertaining to Ai generated art. Saw that it’s not really copyrightable, and then started using the search feature on their discord to find prompts by others for the junk I wanted.

  • DrownedRats@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Bit melodramatic. Even the real artists that midjourney actually stole from don’t claim to have lost millions individually as a result.

  • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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    6 days ago

    I don’t even care about the “AI is content theft” arguments. No self-respecting artist would ever accuse him of plagiarism over this. It looks like garbage. The copyright office rejected his copyright claims on the grounds that he didn’t make it. Same story as the monkey selfie guy: You didn’t make the art, it isn’t your art. If a human didn’t make the art, it can’t be copyrighted.

    He claims it was a mix of Midjourney and Photoshop, but honestly, I’ve made prettier things just fucking around with SDXL on my gaming PC, and I can confirm that it took absolutely no talent or effort to do it. The hardest part of the process was setting up AUTOMATIC1111, and that’s not even very hard.

    And I would never even dream of taking credit for anything I’ve generated, because I didn’t make it. I just typed a bunch of wildcard arguments into a prompt and let my GPU dump out thousands of 4K wallpapers for entertainment. This guy thinks this one artifact-ridden generation has any actual value? It’s “famous” for pissing people off by competing against humans and unjustifiably winning. Being controversial could be valuable, if the controversy didn’t fundamentally render the “art” valueless by revealing that it is nothing more than a GPU vomiting up inference. The real villain in this story is the art contest organizers that stuck a blue ribbon on this slop.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    Another idiot who thinks “prompt engineering” is a real skill and not just another step those companies are using idiots for free AI training.

    You ask AI to draw a ninja turtle on a skateboard, and that “effort” they put into phrasing their request well enough for the AI to understand makes the AI learn the 10 past attempts were looking for what the 11th got

    And now it won’t take ten tries to go that route

    Any “skill” by the user has a very short expiration date because the next version won’t need it thanks to all the time users spent developing those “skills”.

    But no one impressed with AI is smart enough to realize that. And since they’re the on s training the AI…

    Idiots in, idiots out

      • Dasus@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        I completely agree. I wonder whether some IT bachelor’s degrees now have lessons in AI prompting. I remember in 2005 there was a course we had to do which could’ve been labeled “[shitty] Google-Fu” or something. “information searching” is what it would more or less translate to. Basically searching using Google and library searches well. And I don’t mean “library” in the IT-context, but actual libraries. With books. Just had to use the search tools the locals libraries had.

        Such a fucking filler class.

        In my year like 60 started, two classes. After three years like 8 graduated.

    • aiccount@monyet.cc
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      8 days ago

      I use ai when I use search engines. This makes the search engines better. I also use ai when I get spotify suggestions. I use ai when I use autocorrect. I use ai without even realizing I’m using ai and the ai improves from it, and I and many other people get an improved quality of life from it, that’s why nearly everyone uses it just like I do.

      So, @givesomefucks , do you also regularly use ai that improves from from your usage? Or are you not a hypocrite who thinks there is something morally bad about specific ais that you don’t like while doing exactly what you claim to be against with other ais? How are your moral lines drawn?

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        Thanks for the example!

        Whether an individual determines AI “smart” depends on how smart the person is. We’re all all our own frame of reference.

        I have no doubt AI impresses you every day of your life, even stuff that’s not AI apparently, because not all of your examples were.

        • aiccount@monyet.cc
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          7 days ago

          You are just ignorant of the history and evolution of the term “AI”. It’s easy for anyone to learn about it’s history, your point of view is just one of ignorance of the past.

      • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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        7 days ago

        Thanks for demonstrating what a useless term “AI” is when you’re not trying to sell snake oil.

        • aiccount@monyet.cc
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          7 days ago

          Every word in every language changes over time. The term AI changing is the absolute normal. It’s not some mark against it.

          Current llms are phenomenally beneficial for some things. Millions of developers have had their entire careers completely changed. Teachers are able to grade work in 10% of the time. Children through to college students and anyone interested in learning have infinitely patient tutors on demand 24 hours a day. The fact that you are completely clueless about what is going on doesn’t by any stretch of the imagination mean it isn’t happening. It just means that you not only feel like you are “beyond learning”, it also means that you don’t even have people in your life that are still interested in personal growth, or you are too shallow to have conversations with anyone who is.

          This is just beginning. The more you cling to being in denial of progress, the further you will get behind. You are denying any mode of transportation other than horses even exists, while people are routinely flying around the world. It most likely won’t be too long until your mindset is widely accepted as a mental disorder.

          • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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            7 days ago

            Every word in every language changes over time. The term AI changing is the absolute normal. It’s not some mark against it.

            Lumping machine learning algorithms, llms, regressive learning, search algorithms all in one bucket and calling it “AI” serves no proper purpose. There is no consensus, it’s not a clear definition, it’s not convenient and it only helps sell bullshit. Llms aren’t intelligent. Calling them that is the opposite of useful.

            Current llms are phenomenally beneficial for some things.

            Namely: the portfolio of tech shareholders and grifters.

            Millions of developers have had their entire careers completely changed.

            Lol, no. What’s your source for this?

            Teachers are able to grade work in 10% of the time.

            Poor students.

            Children through to college students and anyone interested in learning have infinitely patient tutors on demand 24 hours a day.

            Have you heard of the stories where students believed some AI bullshit more than what their teacher told them? Great “tutor” you have there.

            The fact that you are completely clueless about what is going on

            Sure, bud. /s

            It just means that you not only feel like you are “beyond learning”, it also means that you don’t even have people in your life that are still interested in personal growth, or you are too shallow to have conversations with anyone who is.

            Oh, please tell me more about my life, stranger on the internet! /s

            What an asshole, seriously.

            Have fun in your tech cult, you ableist bootlicker.

            • aiccount@monyet.cc
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              7 days ago

              Yesterday’s AI is today’s normal technology, this is just what keeps happening. Some people just keep forgetting how rapidly things are changing.

              You’ll join this “cult” once the masses do, just like you have been doing all along. Some of us are just out here a little bit in the future. You will be one of us when you think it becomes cool, and then you will self-righteously act like you were one of us all along. That’s just what weak-minded followers do. They try to seem like they knew all along where the world was headed without ever trying to look ahead and ridiculing anyone who does.

              • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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                7 days ago

                The thing you’re evangelizing only leads to more consolidation of power and money, loss of jobs and power for the working class and climate devastation.

            • aiccount@monyet.cc
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              7 days ago

              There is a reason why you point to examples from years ago, that’s because that is where you are still stuck.

              • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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                7 days ago

                Students “correcting” their teachers on AI bullshit isn’t “from years ago”.

                Old examples of AI I counted used to be the bleeding edge of AI research. Now they’re an old hat. The same thing will happen to LLMs. And LLMs won’t lead to so-called “AGI”, just like the other examples didn’t.

      • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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        7 days ago

        Can you point out what’s supposedly wrong with their comment or are you just claiming that every critic of so-called “AI” doesn’t have a clue to justify the hype?

    • hperrin@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      I don’t know about that, in particular, because people generally add more detail, but it teaches the AI what kind of detail to add. So if you’re not picky, then yeah, the AI learns from that kind of thing.

      As far as it being a useful skill, I don’t think it was in the first place. “Prompt engineer” has always been a joke. It’s like being a “sandwich artist”. Everyone can do it with one day of practice.

  • darth_tiktaalik@lemmy.ml
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    8 days ago

    per Wikipedia

    On September 21, 2022, Allen submitted an application to the us copyright office for registration of the image. Prior to the first formal refusal, the Copyright Office Examiner requested that the request would exclude any features of the image generated by Midjourney. Allen declined the request and requested copyright for the whole image.

    So what I’m getting from that is his Photoshop edits aren’t significant enough to constitute a copyrightable work on their own and the copyright office was right to deem it a non-human production.

      • FatCrab@lemmy.one
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        7 days ago

        This has been the copyright office’s stance for quite a while now. Actually, most of the world’s respective IP registrars and authorities do not grant IP rights to AI generated material.

        • ArchRecord@lemm.ee
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          6 days ago

          I’m glad about this, honestly.

          If you want to use an AI model trained on vast sums of publicly posted work, go for it, but be ready for the result to be made into a truly public work that you don’t own at the end of it all.

          • FatCrab@lemmy.one
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            6 days ago

            I agree. I think the effective entry into the public domain of AI generated material, in combination with a lot of reporting/marking laws coming online is an effective incentive to keep a lot of material human made for large corporate actors who don’t like releasing stuff from their own control.

            What I’d like to see in addition to this is a requirement that content-producing models all be open source as well. Note, I don’t think we need weird new IP rights that are effectively a “right to learn from” or the like.

            • ArchRecord@lemm.ee
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              6 days ago

              I’m 100% in favor of requiring models to be open source. That’s been my belief for a while now, because clearly, if someone wants to make an AI model off the backs of other people’s work, they shouldn’t be allowed to restrict or charge access to those models to the same people who had their work used, let alone other people more broadly.