this post was submitted on 17 Aug 2024
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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Just as an interesting "what if" scenario - a human making the effort to stylize Van Gogh is okay, and the problem with the AI model is that it can spit out endless results from endless sources.

What if I made a robot and put the Van Gogh painting AI in it, never releasing in elsewhere. The robot can visualize countless iterations of the piece it wants to make but its only way share it is to actually paint it - much in the same way a human must do the same process.

Does this scenario devalue human effort? Is it an acceptable use of AI? If so does that mean that the underlying issue with AI isn't that it exists in the first place but that its distribution is what makes it devalue humanity?

*This isn't a "gotcha", I just want a little discussion!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 month ago

It's an interesting question! From my point of view, "devaluing human effort" (from an artistic perspective) doesn't really matter - humans will still be creating new and interesting art. I'm solely concerned about the shift in economic power/leverage, as this is what materially affects artists.

This means that if your robot creates paintings with an output rate comparable to a human artist, I don't really see anything wrong with it. The issue arises once you're surpassing the limits of the individual, as this is where the power starts to shift.

As an aside, I'm still incredibly fascinated by the capabilities and development of current AI systems. We've created almost universal approximators that exhibit complex behavior which was pretty much unthinkable 15-20 years ago (in the sense that it was expected to take much longer to achieve current results). Sadly, like any other invention, this incredible technology is being abused by capitalists and populists for profit and gain at the expense of everyone else.