I've seen a lot of talk lately about AI-generated art models and what they mean for professional artists. Many people are concerned that they will be replaced by machines (a new concept that has never been an obstacle for any other profession in history)
As a former professional artist, I understand how much this profession sucks. Clients have long treated artists as magic machines that can spit out whatever you tell them to with a 5-minute turnaround time, so it only makes sense to be anxious now that such a machine actually exists.
I also feel like in a world where the majority of professional artists are using pirated digital software suites, simulated brush strokes, auto-correcting lines, motion tweening, content-aware filling, and countless other pre-programmed conveniences, there doesn't really seem to be a definite line where the digital augmentation of human artistry is supposed to go from "totally fine" to "morally outrageous". Why are helpful tools only okay if they don't help too much?
If there had been any previous occupation in history that had been partially superseded by technology (which there hasn't ever been), we might have a point of reference to tell us that technology is ultimately a good thing, and that a high skill ceiling for creating enjoyable goods/services doesn't really do anybody any favors, save for the people who wish to keep those skills inaccessible lest they impact their profits. Unfortunately nobody in history has ever had their job taken away by a machine before, so we're totally in the dark here.
Keeping all these things in mind, the conclusion one might come to is that humanity can greatly benefit from sharing knowledge and tools, and that training an AI model with existing works of art is not really any different from googling reference pics to draw something yourself. Could it be the thing that people are actually upset about is..........Capitalism? Find out next month on "Stupid Shit People Decide to be Boomers About". Until then let's have an argument
As a former professional artist, I understand how much this profession sucks. Clients have long treated artists as magic machines that can spit out whatever you tell them to with a 5-minute turnaround time, so it only makes sense to be anxious now that such a machine actually exists.
I also feel like in a world where the majority of professional artists are using pirated digital software suites, simulated brush strokes, auto-correcting lines, motion tweening, content-aware filling, and countless other pre-programmed conveniences, there doesn't really seem to be a definite line where the digital augmentation of human artistry is supposed to go from "totally fine" to "morally outrageous". Why are helpful tools only okay if they don't help too much?
If there had been any previous occupation in history that had been partially superseded by technology (which there hasn't ever been), we might have a point of reference to tell us that technology is ultimately a good thing, and that a high skill ceiling for creating enjoyable goods/services doesn't really do anybody any favors, save for the people who wish to keep those skills inaccessible lest they impact their profits. Unfortunately nobody in history has ever had their job taken away by a machine before, so we're totally in the dark here.
Keeping all these things in mind, the conclusion one might come to is that humanity can greatly benefit from sharing knowledge and tools, and that training an AI model with existing works of art is not really any different from googling reference pics to draw something yourself. Could it be the thing that people are actually upset about is..........Capitalism? Find out next month on "Stupid Shit People Decide to be Boomers About". Until then let's have an argument