Husky_Embrace
Author mint
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2024
- Posts
- 206
Use of AI is not accepted on this site. The moral and ethical implications aren't fully understood and is a hot topic. This site believes it is best to not include anything with AI to prevent any current or future problems.
AI has the potential to be a wonderful tool. In some applications it has already done wonderful things. You can spot Tuberculosis faster and more accurate than a human. If you want something bigger, the folding of enzymes that took years to crack has now been solved by AI.
Personally I have also been at the forefront, being an Alpha Tester for DALLā¢E. For someone with very limited art talent it is definitely wonderful to create great things, especially with those unrestricted Alpha and Beta versions. This is the same for writing. It is a great tool as an assistance.
There is a difference between the two categories however. The language and painting is made from data that is not their own. They didn't pay for it, nor created the data.
Imagine going to work, where someone tells you that you're being replaced by AI. They trained the AI without your consent on your work and can now churn out stuff at will. This is what is happening to writers and picture creators in news, education, photography, entertainment. Why take a course in Python if you have AI that trained on their efforts without offering a dime in return? I asked the google search AI if people get any money from what it actively scraped from a news site. The answer is nothing, "but it could prompt more people to click to the source, getting revenue from ad sense." Which is not a good answer, as most people will not click further. Money for google, none for the one who put effort in gathering and writing down the information.
It is no different with writing stories. The question becomes what was made by you, and what was made over the backs of a thousand writers. AI monetising the work of others is simply repugnant.
Again, I see the advantages. Recently I didn't ask my partner, an Excell guru, how to write a complex formula. AI told me and after a few adaptations of the suggestions I got it to work. That being said, morally and ethically it is horrible. Someone making Excell video's doesn't get my click/money, nor millions along with me. Even if it was their work the AI learnt from.
So explaining all that I ask you friendly, do not use AI to make stories for the public.
AI has the potential to be a wonderful tool. In some applications it has already done wonderful things. You can spot Tuberculosis faster and more accurate than a human. If you want something bigger, the folding of enzymes that took years to crack has now been solved by AI.
Personally I have also been at the forefront, being an Alpha Tester for DALLā¢E. For someone with very limited art talent it is definitely wonderful to create great things, especially with those unrestricted Alpha and Beta versions. This is the same for writing. It is a great tool as an assistance.
There is a difference between the two categories however. The language and painting is made from data that is not their own. They didn't pay for it, nor created the data.
Imagine going to work, where someone tells you that you're being replaced by AI. They trained the AI without your consent on your work and can now churn out stuff at will. This is what is happening to writers and picture creators in news, education, photography, entertainment. Why take a course in Python if you have AI that trained on their efforts without offering a dime in return? I asked the google search AI if people get any money from what it actively scraped from a news site. The answer is nothing, "but it could prompt more people to click to the source, getting revenue from ad sense." Which is not a good answer, as most people will not click further. Money for google, none for the one who put effort in gathering and writing down the information.
It is no different with writing stories. The question becomes what was made by you, and what was made over the backs of a thousand writers. AI monetising the work of others is simply repugnant.
Again, I see the advantages. Recently I didn't ask my partner, an Excell guru, how to write a complex formula. AI told me and after a few adaptations of the suggestions I got it to work. That being said, morally and ethically it is horrible. Someone making Excell video's doesn't get my click/money, nor millions along with me. Even if it was their work the AI learnt from.
So explaining all that I ask you friendly, do not use AI to make stories for the public.