▲ | munk-a 7 hours ago | |||||||
The article ends with... > Does the growth of AI have to bring with it the tacit or even explicit encouragement of intellectual theft? And like, yes, 100% - what else is AI but a tool for taking other people's work and reassembling it into a product for you without needing to pay someone. Do you want an awesome studio ghibli'd version of yourself? There are thousands of artists online that you could commission for a few bucks to do it that'd probably make something actually interesting - but no, we go to AI because we want to avoid paying a human. | ||||||||
▲ | sejje 6 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> what else is AI but a tool for taking other people's work and reassembling it into a product for you Well, what I'd like it to be is a tool for generating what I've asked it for, which has nothing to do with other people's work. I've been asking for video game sprites/avatars, for instance. It's presumably trained on lots of images of video games, but I'm not trying to rip those off. I want generic images. > we go to AI because we want to avoid paying a human. No, I go to AI because I can't imagine the nightmare of collaborating with humans to generate hundreds of avatars per day. And I rely on them being generated very quickly. And so on. | ||||||||
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