63 points

I’ve always been confused about this train of thought, because it seems to justify the opposite of what it’s trying to say.

I mean, if the argument is people will use whatever garbage they have on hand to make art… presumably that includes generative AI? Look, I lived through four decades of people making art out of ASCII. My bar for acceptance for this stuff is really low. You give people a thing that makes pictures in any way and you’ll get a) pictures of dicks and b) pictures of other things.

I don’t think GenAI will kill human art for the same reasons I don’t think AI art is even in competition with human art. I may be moved or impressed by a generated image, but it’ll be for different reasons and in different scales than I’m… eh… moved and impressed by hot dragon rock lady here. Just like I can be impressed by the artistry in a photo but not for the same reasons I’m impressed by an oil painting. Different media, different forms of expression, different skill sets.

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50 points

Nothing will kill art itself, GenAI will simply be incorporated as another tool

Killing the ability to make money from art AND the bs that corporations are pulling in regards to AI, profit and making line go up is what people are mad about, but that anger is constantly misplaced leading to lines of thought like this lol

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15 points

I believe this states the take many have - much like nobody batted an eye about auto-contrast, content-aware fill, or line smoothing. They weren’t trying to replace humans with programs, weren’t causing huge environmental impact, and weren’t trained on stolen content. It’s the ham-handed implementation that most are opposed to, combined with the obnoxious techbro mentality.

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-4 points

I don’t understand why generative AI will kill making money from art. As you said, it’s just a tool.

If an artist can make a web comic in a fraction of the time they used to, they can multiply their output and thus possibly sell to more. A good gen AI artist would also be a good prompt engineer, which would also mean an expanded skillset. Game developers, architects, engineers, could also speed up their work to hit the ground running instead of doing a bunch of repetitive stuff.

Everybody has to adapt to AI. Adapt or die, it’s quite simple.

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22 points

I don’t understand why generative AI will kill making money from art. As you said, it’s just a tool.

If an artist can make a web comic in a fraction of the time they used to, they can multiply their output and thus possibly sell to more.

You’re presenting the scenario of an artist using a tool to create more art. I think the concern is someone who would have hired an artist uses the tool themselves to make art instead of hiring the artist. Hence the comment @cm0002@lemmy.world made that GenAI won’t kill art, but it will kill the ability to make money from art.

This isn’t a new thing that just started with GenAI though. Entire professions of commercial art evaporated with the introduction of computers. How many typesetters were employed by major newspapers around the world 50 years ago? With the introduction of computers the number has drastically reduced. This is also true of graphic artists that used to work all day over a light box, waxer, and Exacto knife. Now all of that is done with far fewer people in a computer. I don’t see how GenAI different from those technologies and how they impacted artist jobs.

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3 points

You’re thinking of art in terms of a product. It’s not. Art is an expression of creativity. People drawn to it will do it just because they can. They make money from it because capitalism doesn’t give them many other opportunities to provide a basic living.

“Adapt or die” is a cute phrase when it’s not being applied to yourself.

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16 points

I think the argument is that an AI “artist” is incapable of creating art. Their “tool” does the work for them. Whereas other artists use digital tools but as just that - tools. The art comes from the artist.

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11 points

This pretty well encapsulates my feelings, except for the issue of training the models. AI is cool tech, but the fact remains that people are making money off of scraped content. Not to mention the environmental aspect.

Honestly I find it difficult to reconcile.

In a perfect world, we would have open source models trained on public domain and properly licensed content.

I don’t think AI is going to replace artists any time soon. On the personal side, people create for the joy of it, whatever that means to them. On the professional side, people have a hard enough time communicating what they want to an actual person, much less a computer.

As someone that likely has moderate aphantasia, I really struggle with describing what I want. Being able to tell an image gen to make so many variations of X, and then commission a friend to take inspiration from Y and Z to make something original is really freeing for both sides, imo.

I’ve never gotten exactly what I’m looking for, but it almost always gives me something to point to, without doing a bunch of test drafts. I suppose that’s technically taking work away from the artist, but so does having an ‘undo’ button in procreate.

Idk, it’s a more complex issue than many make it out to be. I’m still further on the fuck ai side than not, just due to its current implementations.

End rant.

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4 points

I mean Adobe firefly addresses the properly licensed dataset issue and afaik it’s all viewable (though I’d much prefer something anyone could use offline locally). Environmental impact will always be an issue unless we see some evidence of mitigation either from direct green energy use or at least creating additional green energy generation from any organization doing the base model training.

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3 points

There’s a good amount of research going into reducing the compute needed for training and inference, as well as a ton of R&D going into making far more energy efficient hardware for training and inference

Just like how 3D rendering has gone from dedicated $40,000 workstations and render farms to something that’s just done for funsies on your phone, the capabilities of these really powerful models will eventually be squished onto the cheapest, lowest power mass market computers of the day

The biggest long term challenge will be the training data and licensing of outputs. If AI outputs are stuck in a legal state where you simply can’t use them commercially, the whole industry will collapse and return to the most ignored corners of university computer science programs. If models aren’t required to get licensing for all training data we’ll probably just keep seeing companies hoovering up data in the most unethical possible ways to train their big models

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2 points

Environmental impact of gen AI pales in comparison to the environmental impact of alternatively making all the generated pieces manually. Let’s say Shutterstock switches purely to genAI images trained on their own licensed stock images. Do you think their total carbon output will go up or down now that they’ve stopped doing photoshoots of people and objects in seemingly random situations?

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4 points

The thing is, an AI ‘artist’ isn’t making art. They are generating images with no real meaning or effort put into them.

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8 points

That depends on what they’re doing. If they’re entering a prompt and rolling with what they get out of it, then sure.

If they’re inputting a prompt and refining it with solely AI tools then meeeh, that starts to fade a little. I’d ask why someone is spending hours going back and forth with an AI instead of doing some of it manually, but it’s hard to tell one way or the other from the final output.

If they’re inputting a prompt, refining it with AI tools and heavily editing what comes out in image editing software that’s approaching some strange digital mixed media weirdness I don’t think we have particularly good intuitions for.

If they’re inputting a prompt and using the output as some building block like a texture on a 3D model or for a content aware fill in photo editing or for a brush or a stamp I genuinely have no mental model for what impact that has in my assessment of the “meaning” or “effort” going into a piece, if I’m being perfectly honest.

Reductionism isn’t serving us particularly well on this one. Makes the pushback feel poorly informed and excessively dogmatic.

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1 point

if you hire a graphic designer to make you a thing, and keep rejecting designs and saying “do it a little more like this” “change this part though” for hours, would that make you an artist?

this is exactly the same only the graphic designers who really made it aren’t getting paid.

riding in a plane doesn’t make you a pilot. driving a car doesn’t make you a mechanic. sitting next to an band and saying “more cowbell” doesn’t make you a musician…. brushing your teeth doesn’t make you a dentist….

ai could be used by artists, as one of many tools, to make art, but just generating a picture from a prompt doesn’t make you an artist.

but fraudulent, compulsive liars and narcissists will do anything to pretend like they have talent short of actually developing talent in anything (because you need to accept failures and learn from them to improve)

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-2 points

Typing a prompt still isn’t making art. If you look at art, everything has intent behind it, nothing is random, everyone has their own style that evolves. Like if you’re drawing a meadow, there are lots of choices you make in the progress, like what plants you draw, in what style, in what stage, are any of them damaged for example. Art isn’t just about the end result, it’s the process itself.

Typing a prompt is describing an image, not making it.

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3 points

In the absence of needing to use skills to make a living, I have no problem with AI art. In a hypothetical anarchist mutual aid society, people could make art with whatever methods they prefer. Some might create AI models to make art because they’re interested in that sort of thing. Others will make art in the traditional ways, also because they’re interested in that sort of thing. There doesn’t have to be tension between the two, and their basic needs are all there.

When people have to use their skills to make a living, though, then there’s a problem. So many of the places that were paying artists are now whipping something out with an AI model. That leaves artists without a way to cover their basic needs at all.

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2 points

I don’t know how much that logic tracks, at least long term. And I don’t know that I’m going to be more inclined to be on the side of human labor over automation now when I wasn’t for garments, car manufacturing and other commodities. The John Henry of visual arts I am not.

I do have a couple of seemingly opposing but not contradictory points to add to that, though. One is that historically anti-automation, anti-industrialization movements have a pretty bad track record at succeeding. The other is that I think you’re giving “AI art” way too much credit. Small and medium-sized commissions may get impacted (I am on record saying that AI is the new “cousin who knows Photoshop” and I stand by it). For anything an actual professional needs to book and hire based on quality? Nah.

There may still be an impact on that high end, because I expect that generated elements will become a tool in an artist’s toolset more than anything else. That may speed work up and require fewer people, but not “leave artists without a way to cover basic needs” necessarily. Just like photography, just like CG, just like Photoshop and so on. There was doom and gloom around all of those as well, and hyperbolic claims from tech peddlers, too. Go look up some of the claims of early photography entrepeneurs about what the technology would eventually be able to do, some are hilarious.

I also expect sooner or later people will get good at spotting telltale machine-generation quirks and put additional value in organic, human-looking creative products. People are already misidentifying human art as AI art, artists will likely lean into that. Think vinyl into CDs back into vinyl or the premium on less processed foods more than… I don’t know, cars that don’t have rattling doors or whatever.

That’s a guess or a forecast, though. We’ll see where it goes.

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-2 points

When people have to use their skills to make a living, though, then there’s a problem.

Progress leaves many professions behind. It’s lamentable, but a price worth paying.

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3 points

Which is nice to say when your profession isn’t the one on the chopping block.

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54 points

This is gonna confuse an archaeologist in a few millennia.

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37 points

Archaeologists:

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28 points

Archaeologists will just call it a ritualistic artifact. Like they already do with every piece of ancient porn they find.

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8 points

Around the 2000’s a new pagan religion emerged, by the name of Furry. The believers of Furry followed human-animal hybrid spirits, often honoring them through depictions in the arts and even some costumes. A lot of these spirits might have been fertility gods.

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4 points
*

Although we studied this acient relicts in great detail, we can not make sense out of the high representation of fertility related dieties in comparison to other typical deities i.e.war or hunting gods. A possible explanation could be a crisis of reproduction caused by the cost of living during this period of time.

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5 points

Wanking: The Ritual

New on Steam!

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2 points

And the movie will be called The Wankening with Mahk Wahlberg.

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19 points

arouse

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31 points

Art is inherent in us. Just like the need to put boobs on mythical lizard creatures.

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10 points

Drawing boobs is second only to the instinct to draw cocks.

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4 points

If that Heavy Metal episode of South Park has taught me anything, it’s that everything looks better with boobs.

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28 points

Furries: “I would like to purchase this rock.”

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21 points

*Scalies

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3 points

I wouldn’t purchase this without nipples at least

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1 point

Yes add the mouse button please

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17 points

The future is approaching. When society will collapse a new Furry-Stone age will begin…

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