zlacker

[return to "Who knew the first AI battles would be fought by artists?"]
1. 4bpp+65[view] [source] 2022-12-15 12:25:25
>>dredmo+(OP)
Surely, if the next Stable Diffusion had to be trained from a dataset that has been purged of images that were not under a permissive license, this would at most be a minor setback on AI's road to obsoleting painting that is more craft than art. Do artists not realise this (perhaps because they have some kind of conceit along the lines of "it only can produce good-looking images because it is rearranging pieces of some Real Artists' works it was trained on"), are they hoping to inspire overshoot legislation (perhaps something following the music industry model in several countries: AI-generated images assumed pirated until proven otherwise, with protection money to be paid to an artists' guild?), or is this just a desperate rearguard action?
◧◩
2. Tepix+N5[view] [source] 2022-12-15 12:29:40
>>4bpp+65
Imagine you are an artist and you have developed your unique style.

Would you mind if AI starts creating art like yours?

What if your clients tell you they bought the AI generated art instead of yours?

◧◩◪
3. chrisc+jf[view] [source] 2022-12-15 13:18:34
>>Tepix+N5
Many skilled and talented programmers work on open source software for the explicit purpose of allowing it to be copied and extended in any fashion.
◧◩◪◨
4. mejuto+1F[view] [source] 2022-12-15 15:09:36
>>chrisc+jf
> in any fashion.

Several open source licenses do not agree with this (they enforce restrictions on how it is to be shared).

◧◩◪◨⬒
5. mtrowe+2Q[view] [source] 2022-12-15 15:48:46
>>mejuto+1F
This is true, and many bitter wars are fought over ISS licensing. I’m not sure it derails his point - there’s an awful lot of BSD, MIT etc licensed code out there.
[go to top]