iwatchus
Older than that
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2015
- Posts
- 1,539
Not nearly to the extent they did 125 years ago.People still go to community theaters. Etc...
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Not nearly to the extent they did 125 years ago.People still go to community theaters. Etc...
Not nearly to the extent they did 125 years ago.
Yeah, but if you have a celeb voluntarily leasing out their likeness, maybe spending a tiny bit will give you legitimacy, legal protection and helping clients to get over the moral implications, maybe that's worth it?
I haven't done enough homework on this issue to have much of an opinion, but it does have some interesting erotic implications. It's very easy to imagine the Internet becoming populated by AI erotic performers or partners with whom one can interact. The CGI is so good now that it is genuinely difficult to tell what's real and what's not.
Naturally, the stories gave me a plot bunny for an AI erotica performer and her adventures. Call her Jilly Pornwood.
Or give them an outlet that doesn't harm any real people.For an even darker concern, it will be turned into fodder for pedo's, giving them videos to further inflame their sick desires.![]()
That’s funny. It's not AI spreading falsehoods; it's humans.A serious problem brought about by artificial intelligence is that when falsehoods are presented as truths, it becomes extremely difficult for people to distinguish between what is real and what is fake. Such a situation will inevitably lead to a backlash, and it is only a matter of time.
As an old Chinese saying goes, 'Excess leads to sorrow' and 'When things reach their extreme, they revert to the opposite.' Ultimately, the most advanced technologies will have to regress to the most primitive levels.
When various artificial intelligences on the internet can no longer inspire trust, the only solution will be to revert to the most basic models—for example, requiring real people to be present at the scene of incidents to enable all relevant parties to build mutual trust. In this case, the low-cost advantages brought by artificial intelligence or high technology will disappear, and the cost of interpersonal communication will return to previous levels or even higher levels.
Hence the Anthropic lawsuit outcome, which was not nearly enough given the severity of the massive theft of IP.
Their claim becomes even more absurd when you consider that these machines are trained on not hundreds but millions of texts, most of them freely available in the public domain. The influence of any single book or source on the learning process is therefore negligible. Yet they have the audacity to demand royalties.That lawsuit was trash.
Saying it's illegal to let an AI learn by reading books is the same as saying it's illegal for people to learn by reading books.
Food is an art. prove me wrong. People still pay top dollar for good food. People will continue to pay for art by real artists. The chef in the kitchen making the art never makes as much as the owner of the restaurant. The artists will never make as much as the publishing houses and record labels and Hollywood. A very few and now even fewer. Video did not kill the radio star . Being a star on the radio is many musician's dream....you're comparing food options with creative arts (and the corollary issue of how artists are to be recompensed in the future). I don't think your analogy works as well as you think.
Yesssssss! Thank you! I've been making that argument for a long time! How is it different that I read White Fang and Call of the Wild and wrote my first story in that style? I was in second grade. Should I compensate Jack London's family because I was inspired and wrote in that style, but my own story? It feels weird how we make a big block on that when it's a robot. If I am inspired by acertain style of art and spend years mastering the style to draw my own characters, how is that different than a robot other than the time? Data from Star Trek learned instantly if he plugged in. Humans are just slower, but I don't see the difference.That lawsuit was trash.
Saying it's illegal to let an AI learn by reading books is the same as saying it's illegal for people to learn by reading books.
The judgement against Anthropic was specifically about the use of pirated books to train an AI. It's illegal for humans to pirate books. What's your point here?That lawsuit was trash.
Saying it's illegal to let an AI learn by reading books is the same as saying it's illegal for people to learn by reading books.
Besides @Bramblethorn’s point, the key difference is social harm. You being inspired by White Fang and Call of the Wild to write a Jack London pastiche is not the same as OpenAI indiscriminately exploiting copyrighted material at scale, which has demonstrably put people who have created those copyrighted materials out of their jobs.Yesssssss! Thank you! I've been making that argument for a long time! How is it different that I read White Fang and Call of the Wild and wrote my first story in that style? I was in second grade. Should I compensate Jack London's family because I was inspired and wrote in that style, but my own story? It feels weird how we make a big block on that when it's a robot. If I am inspired by acertain style of art and spend years mastering the style to draw my own characters, how is that different than a robot other than the time? Data from Star Trek learned instantly if he plugged in. Humans are just slower, but I don't see the difference.
Yesssssss! Thank you! I've been making that argument for a long time! How is it different that I read White Fang and Call of the Wild and wrote my first story in that style? I was in second grade. Should I compensate Jack London's family because I was inspired and wrote in that style, but my own story?
It feels weird how we make a big block on that when it's a robot. If I am inspired by acertain style of art and spend years mastering the style to draw my own characters, how is that different than a robot other than the time?
Besides @Bramblethorn’s point, the key difference is social harm. You being inspired by White Fang and Call of the Wild to write a Jack London pastiche is not the same as OpenAI indiscriminately exploiting copyrighted material at scale, which has demonstrably put people who have created those copyrighted materials out of their jobs.
Been a while since I’ve seen an ‘actually, property is theft’ argument out in the wild.And what is this supposed social harm?
Who was put out of a job?
‘Saying it’s illegal to steal a book is the same as saying it’s illegal to pay for a book.’Saying it's illegal to let an AI learn by reading books is the same as saying it's illegal for people to learn by reading books.
Did you steal those books and then commercialize your copies?How is it different that I read White Fang and Call of the Wild and wrote my first story in that style?
The judgement against Anthropic was specifically about the use of pirated books to train an AI. It's illegal for humans to pirate books. What's your point here?
Soon enough, CGI will be powerful enough to turn a 30K-word story into a full 90-min ultra-definition movie in an instant, with the author free to tweak it endlessly to bring their precious “babies” to life.You cannot get toothpaste back into the tube; AI actors and actresses, like the nuclear bomb and unsocial media, are here to stay. For better or for worse, the ride’s just started.
Actually, I'm seeing creatives of all kinds rejecting any use at all of GenAI. It's not universal, but enough that I question your basis for gloating over such an imagined scenario.Soon enough, CGI will be powerful enough to turn a 30K-word story into a full 90-min ultra-definition movie in an instant, with the author free to tweak it endlessly to bring their precious “babies” to life.
It will be rather amusing to watch all those who now speak so vehemently against this existential threat, this anomaly, rush to play with their new toys and then shamelessly share links to their creations. You will hear nothing about compensating the actors whose performances trained the AI, nor about the moral issues this technological degradation brings upon human art. But do not worry; I will be here to remind them.![]()
Dude, have you ever even rendered an image, using AI on your own PC? Do you have any idea the kind of processing power you'd need to generate a 90-minute UHD movie, not in an instant but in, say, 10-15 minutes?Soon enough, CGI will be powerful enough to turn a 30K-word story into a full 90-min ultra-definition movie in an instant, with the author free to tweak it endlessly to bring their precious “babies” to life.
Appreciate the thoughtful post.AI actors and actresses, like the nuclear bomb and unsocial media, are here to stay.
What makes you think I'm a dude?Dude, have you ever even rendered an image, using AI on your own PC? Do you have any idea the kind of processing power you'd need to generate a 90-minute UHD movie, not in an instant but in, say, 10-15 minutes?
There's fascination with AI, and then there's pure nonsense.