• PKMKII [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        1 year ago

        The paradox of terminal coomer brain combined with “we represent the continuation of Puritanism.” They put on airs of upholding tradition cultural values while fundamentally being hedonists who want none of that restraint. They just need something to give their whites-only carnal desire a veil of principle.

      • DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 year ago

        Not necessarily. Open AI is trained with so much porn, and people ask it for so much porn, that it just assumes that all requests should include huge tits automatically.

    • morrowind@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I think we need to just start calling it “content” AI generated content is not art, especially in a context like this

        • FunkyStuff [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          1 year ago

          Making art easier by allowing an artist to get the thing they actually wanna make a little bit more practical to realize = halal.

          Making “art” easier by making a stochastic model that just copy pastes training data from other artists to make a crude representation of what the user wrote into a text box = haram.

          • WoofWoof91 [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            1 year ago

            i use stable diffusion to generate npc images in my ttrpgs
            it’s handy to be able to churn out a bunch of decent looking tokens without having to trawl the internet for ages

            • FunkyStuff [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              1 year ago

              Yeah, I agree, it’s kind of a blurry line. If someone draws something and uses AI to enhance it it’s not the end of the world, and I think it’s still art unless the “enhancement” is totally replacing big parts, or all, of the input. Otherwise, it’s no different than any other tool that has made art easier to make.

              But I think in most cases generative AI can’t make anything that could reasonably be considered art, because the substance they’re taking from to make the output isn’t even the user’s. It’s nothing more than a very advanced plagiarism machine where your prompt tells it which works to plagiarize from.

                • FunkyStuff [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  1 year ago

                  I think the photographer example you put does touch upon an interesting point since there really were people who ridiculed photography as not art. And honestly the criteria I had said kinda would disqualify photography, which is unfair.

                  Would AI be able to create art if it really did understand how the pieces it’s putting together are part of what the user wants? I think it might be an useless question, because skeptics (like me) can keep shifting the goalposts of what understanding really means. So it’s unfalsifiable in a way. Some techbros claim AI can understand it because they are capable of minimizing a loss function. But I’m not satisfied by that because it amounts to making the claim that if a system performs a task well, the system has the property of having a cognitive understanding of the task. It’s a non sequitur, and I’ve seen AI enthusiasts make the same form of non sequitur a thousand times.

                  Maybe the conclusion we can draw from it is that trying to define what exactly is and isn’t art is hard, but clearly, the OP is not.

          • novibe@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            I would agree with you, if that was at all how the AIs generate images.

            They don’t “copy and paste” anything. The images they make are novel. The AI is only trained on other images. It doesn’t have access to them to copy them once the training ends.

            The way the AI generates new images is really similar to humans. It goes over its references and literally creates a brand new image.

            Now, just like a person, you can ask it to make something as an exact copy of something that exists. And it can do it like a human, through “technique” and references. But it’s not copying directly, it’s making a new image that is like the one you asked it to copy.

            I really wish people would realise this. Idk why the idea image generating AI is “copying” from a database of images is so prevalent…

            The database of images is literally only used during training. Once the AI is set the database doesn’t exist to it anymore.

            The difference between an artist who studied their whole life, seeing paintings, seeing references, going to classes, to then create new images from their own mind -> to one that traces images from google.

            AI currently does the first, not the latter.

            • FunkyStuff [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              1 year ago

              Look, I know how deep learning works. I know it doesn’t literally copy the images from the training dataset. But the entire point of supervised learning is to burn information about the training data into the weights and biases of a neural network in such a way that it generalizes over some domain, and can correlate the desired inputs with the desired outputs. Just because you’re using stochastic methods to indirectly reproduce the training data (of course, in a way that’s invisible to humans because of the nature of deep neural networks), doesn’t suddenly erase the fact that the only substance an AI has to draw from is the training data itself.

              I think it’s really oversimplifying how humans make art to say that it’s just going over references and creating something new from it. As humans, we are influenced by the work we’ve seen, but because of our unique experience we inject something completely new into any art we make, no matter how derivative. An AI is incapable of doing the same (except for some random noise), because literally all it’s capable of doing is composing together information that has been baked into its weights and biases. It’s not like when you ask a generative AI to make something for you, it will decide to get funky with it. All it’s doing is drawing from the information that has been baked into it.

              Just like how ChatGPT doesn’t actually understand what it’s saying because it’s only capable of predicting statistical relationships between words one word at a time, and has no model of meaning, only of how words go together in the training data, AI that generates images doesn’t actually know what it’s making or why. That is totally different from humans who make a piece of art step by step and do so very deliberately.

              Edit: I recommend you watch this video by an astrophysicist who works with machine learning regularly, she makes my point a lot better than I can. https://youtu.be/EUrOxh_0leE

              • novibe@lemmy.ml
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                1 year ago

                How would you classify those “experiences” people have that influence their art or work other than data? Honest question.

                And very interesting video. I still don’t 100% align with this perspective, cause I feel it tries to give something extra to the brain than materiality. While I’m no material reductionist, I don’t think our human creativity is “special” or “metaphysical”. It’s our brain, and it’s physical. It can be physically replicated.

                I think AI will have a “soul” or consciousness because I think everything already has it. It’s just our human biology that allows this consciousness to be self-experiential and experience other things, such as thoughts and ideas and feelings. A rock doesn’t have those, but it has a “soul” or consciousness. But I feel I digressed a lot lol

                Also to make it clear, I don’t think AI exists already. I think these models and developments we have are part of AI though.

                • FunkyStuff [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                  1 year ago

                  I don’t disagree that experiences are data. The major distinction I’m making is that the human creative process uses more than just data, we have intention, aesthetics, we make mistakes, change our minds, iterate, etc. For a generative AI, the “creative process” is tokenizing a string, running the tokens through an attention matrix, plugging that into a thousand different matrices that then go into a post processing layer and they spit out an image. At no point does it look at what it’s doing and evaluate how it’s gonna fit into the final picture.

                  As for the rest of your reasoning, I neither agree nor disagree, I think we just don’t have the same definition of consciousness.

        • UlyssesT [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          1 year ago

          made art easier

          Made printing imitations of art easier. Sure, those imitations can be used as part of a larger work, but the point still stands.

          • Tachanka [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            1 year ago

            people said the same thing about photography. And that was before digital photography, back when some level of knowledge of photochemistry was required, and you needed a dark room to develop in, etc. People said that it was just an imitation of painting. That turned out to not be quite the case and photography developed into its own art form, and painting became less focused on realism and documenting reality since that became the domain of photography. What photography really accomplished was reducing the amount of time and technical ability required to produce art. Same with AI stuff even if it’s reactionary junk a lot of the time, that says more about who’s writing the prompt and who’s curating the database that the model is trained on. I imagine sculptors were also upset when 3D modeling and 3D printing showed up.

            I go with Marx on this and stress that the problem isn’t the means of production but who controls it. Even in the context of AI generated art, the labor is reduced to the amount of time needed to think up and write a prompt (the labor of thinking of and writing a prompt is very small) but you can then take the output and manually refine it using traditional methods if you’re capable, or refine/iterate the prompt etc. So there is some creativity going into it. And then of course AI models usually have a database of art that has already been created to draw statistical data from when generating new art. The process of curating/maintaining/labelling that database requires a huge amount of labor, as does the process of writing and maintaining the model itself. Technology is what Marx called constant capital. Constant capital is just dead labor. i.e. labor that was already performed in the past. When you generate AI art it’s not that there’s no labor going into it, it’s just that the labor was performed in the past by countless people. Same as when you use a hammer you bought from a store. You still exercise labor power to use the hammer, it’s just that the labor of making the hammer was performed in the past for you by different people.

            It’s also not only prompt writing but also image-to-image. So you can take a crudely drawn input image and have the AI refine it. So that still requires creativity on your part, as well.

            this is AI generated but I also think it’s creative and it’s not just reactionary slop like the pilgrim shit in the OP.

            • CrushKillDestroySwag@hexbear.net
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              1 year ago

              I’ve generated a lot of images with these tools, but they’re not art.

              The problem with image generation is that, unlike a camera which replaces the choices that a painter would make while painting a scene with the choices a photographer makes while shooting it, image generation robs an artist of the ability to make choices while constructing their work and doesn’t replace them with anything substantial.

              Now you might be tempted to say that engineering the prompt lets you make choices while generating images. It does so only in the most surface-level way possible, alienating the “artist” from 99% of what goes into creating an image. All of the choices that a painter would make while the paint is hitting the canvas are instead made by the algorithm, and they are made specifically to copy the choices artists in the past have made, not to come up with anything novel or unique. Then the person who wrote the prompt views the output and decides if it’s “close enough” to what they had in mind or not, without exercising artistic control over the process at any point save for the very beginning and end of it.

              That is not to say that you can’t take a generated image and start making art with it, but every pixel that was generated that you don’t change is a choice that the bot made that you didn’t, a tiny bit of alienation from your own work that you have invited into the artistic process, and frankly that cheapens it.

              • Tachanka [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                1 year ago

                but every pixel that was generated that you don’t change is a choice that the bot made that you didn’t

                the bot made zero choices. It consulted your prompt (a choice you made) and then it consulted a database full of pre-existing human-made art that has been curated and labelled and statistically sorted. Also at some point some random noise is introduced so it doesn’t generate the same thing twice. Bots do not make choices. These are statistical models. It’s helpful not to mystify them or attribute agency to them.

                Also I don’t get the point of gatekeeping art according to technical ability, which just comes down to how much free time you have to practice, your level of educational attainment, how much disposable income you have to pay for said education, and your physical ability. If a person with no arms decides to generate a painting with AI from a carefully written prompt they came up with, and someone says “that’s not real art because you didn’t use your hands”… what is the point of that? If an idea comes to mind, you should be free to make it however you want.

                • CrushKillDestroySwag@hexbear.net
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                  1 year ago

                  I never said the bot made choices. I said it removed choices from the artist. Whoops thanks for replying in good faith though.

                  Edit: The important thing is that the choices from the artist are getting taken away.

                  Also I never said you need technical ability to make art, I’m working from the unstated assumption that it is the choices we make when we create art that makes it… art. A person who is bad a doodling who nevertheless makes a drawing has made art - that same person putting a couple words into a generator prompt has not.

                  Last thing: don’t fucking come at me with an argument about gatekeeping based on class and wealth when the only reason this fucking toy exists for you to play with in the first place is untold billions of hours of stolen labor from poor countries.

              • Sephitard9001 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                1 year ago

                every pixel that was generated that you don’t change is a choice that the bot made that you didn’t, a tiny bit of alienation from your own work that you have invited into the artistic process, and frankly that cheapens it.

                This is a really good argument I think for excluding most AI content from “art”. You put into words that disappointing, unamused feeling you get after the novelty wears off when you learn an image is AI. Like it’s illegitimate but you can’t explain why because historically art has always been pushing boundaries and making people question art itself. Maybe in the future, people saying this will be considered luddites who can’t appreciate “painting with words” or whatever.

            • UlyssesT [he/him]@hexbear.net
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              1 year ago

              I already said it can be a viable tool and addition to an artist’s work; my point is that on its own, using LLM output directly with no further interaction is like taking random photographs, I mean completely random photographs no framing or lighting considerations or anything of the sort, just flashing the bulb a bunch of times with no further decisions made (yeah yeah that itself could be an intentional art project if we go down that rabbit hole I know I know).

              The pic you provided had enough artist input in its parameters to be like an artfully-taken photograph.

              I go with Marx on this and stress that the problem isn’t the means of production but who controls it.

              No arguments from me there.

      • silent_water [she/her]@hexbear.net
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        1 year ago

        content gives it a bit too much credit. there’s almost always body horror (look at the baby’s fingers sinking into her collarbone) and I’m so sick of it that I block AI crap as spam on my feed.

    • ElChapoDeChapo [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      1 year ago

      You’re actually right, most of this shit did come from the conservative side of the fetish community

      I have no idea how they broke containment but I really wasn’t paying much attention to these weirdos

  • Comp4 [she/her]@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    They look like historically accurate pilgrims to me. Cant wait till they replace all the pictures in history books with such life like depictions so-true

  • bazingabrain@hexbear.net
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    1 year ago

    Has the person running this account ever been to church? The average catholic man is either a tall skinny stick or a somewhat overweight dad dude. No comments on the woman too lol, just really weird terminally online bullshit.