If a teacher tells a student to draw an apple, the picture created belongs to the student's imagination from which it came. When we instruct AI to create something, we cannot claim that we created it because (like the teacher) , we have merely given a prompt/instruction. The AI is the actual creator. (Interesting talk though. No disrespect intended towards Mr. Dougherty observations.)
People usually don't accept the first image from these AI tools. They keep changing the prompts and using other touch up tools until the result more closely matches what their imagination had in mind. This isn't much different than a human artist, other than the lack of skills necessary to generate the image with a pen or brush.
when you use a camera to take a picture, do you think that the picture belongs to the camera? or to you who instructed the camera to take the picture in that kind of angle.
So to be clear- these machines allow their operator to transmit their ideas into reality but each time you use the same prompt a different image is created? So- which of these practically infinite number of possible iterations accurately represents the users creative vision- is it the first? or is it the one the machine generates ten thousand times later? Or a million times later? You can see the problem here- if the exact same prompt will generate a different image each time it's used there can be no real corellation betweent the users intent and the final image that is generated because THERE IS NO FINAL IMAGE, just a practially infinite number of iterations. In place of artisitc intent we have fatigue- when the point is reached that the user is unwilling to continue the game they will stop- and whatever iteration they have reached at this point is their 'vision'- or so they will insist. But can we really take this claim seriously? Look at the odds here- they begin a process of iteration that could in theory last the rest of their lives as they continue to generate more and more images based on their original prompt- potentially millions if not billions of possible iterations might be made. And yet they claim, after generating a mere dozen or so iterations that their creative vision has been achived? That iteration number 13 of a possible billion iterations is exactly the image they were trying to create- really? If that is true these people are wasting their time making AI Art- they should be playing the lottery! Seriously guys- can we stop this nonsense that these image generators are serious tools of artistic creation or that they 'democratise' art, (whatever that means). We are making fools of ourselves here with this kind of talk, deluding ourselves that the quasi random outputs of machines are somehow worthy of serious consideration as artefacts of human creativity.
Interesting presentation, ask people who have trained and worked their entire lives to earn a living as writers, artists, photographers, models, cinematographers etc how they feel about it. The end result is “this is really cool, it will make millions of creatives redundant but they can work in Amazon warehouses … at least until they’re fully robotic … but look I can make a robot dance video in 3 seconds.”
Well, there will be a selection of average and brilliant creators. Guess which category AI will replace first... In terms of modern chart music (electronic kind of pop) I've been wondering for the last 10 years if it's not all recorded by the same producers' team. Much of it show no to little sign of originality. If AI can do the same, fine with me, I don't listen to that anyway.
Amazing! I was an AI skeptic for a long time, but finally started 'playing' with it last fall and now I have this UA-cam channel where I can communicate my passion for mindfulness to the world using AI-generated video. It's just a start, but I'm excited about where we are going.
same here. Still worried a little where it is all going in the coming years tbh. Great videos actually, I love it, very calming, and nice texts! Which AI-video gen tool do you use?
What stopped you before ai? Money? There's an entire collection of free software from gimp to blender. No skill? UA-cam is overflowing with free tutorials. Art was democratized before ai. Nothing stops you from shooting footage from your phone, learning with tutorials, animating and editing with free software, drawing with free software or, heaven forbid, a pencil. Truth is you didn't want to learn, nor did you want to pay someone who did bother to learn. Instead ask a glorified algorithm, trained on the work of real artists without credit or compensation, to do it for free. The truth is you want what you want regardless of who it hurts or the damage it causes.
@@michaeldougherty363- I would encourage you to take a step out of your bubble and watch the video "AI vs. Artists - The Biggest Art Heist in History". Maybe appreciate what this technology really does and the people it hurts.
Very cool. However, the AI usually spits out banal, basic, and literal interpretations of the text. Its still amazing, and i cant wait to see its potential.
If a teacher tells a student to draw an apple, the picture created belongs to the student's imagination from which it came. When we instruct AI to create something, we cannot claim that we created it because (like the teacher) , we have merely given a prompt/instruction. The AI is the actual creator. (Interesting talk though. No disrespect intended towards Mr. Dougherty observations.)
People usually don't accept the first image from these AI tools. They keep changing the prompts and using other touch up tools until the result more closely matches what their imagination had in mind. This isn't much different than a human artist, other than the lack of skills necessary to generate the image with a pen or brush.
when you use a camera to take a picture, do you think that the picture belongs to the camera? or to you who instructed the camera to take the picture in that kind of angle.
So to be clear- these machines allow their operator to transmit their ideas into reality but each time you use the same prompt a different image is created? So- which of these practically infinite number of possible iterations accurately represents the users creative vision- is it the first? or is it the one the machine generates ten thousand times later? Or a million times later?
You can see the problem here- if the exact same prompt will generate a different image each time it's used there can be no real corellation betweent the users intent and the final image that is generated because THERE IS NO FINAL IMAGE, just a practially infinite number of iterations.
In place of artisitc intent we have fatigue- when the point is reached that the user is unwilling to continue the game they will stop- and whatever iteration they have reached at this point is their 'vision'- or so they will insist. But can we really take this claim seriously? Look at the odds here- they begin a process of iteration that could in theory last the rest of their lives as they continue to generate more and more images based on their original prompt- potentially millions if not billions of possible iterations might be made.
And yet they claim, after generating a mere dozen or so iterations that their creative vision has been achived? That iteration number 13 of a possible billion iterations is exactly the image they were trying to create- really? If that is true these people are wasting their time making AI Art- they should be playing the lottery!
Seriously guys- can we stop this nonsense that these image generators are serious tools of artistic creation or that they 'democratise' art, (whatever that means). We are making fools of ourselves here with this kind of talk, deluding ourselves that the quasi random outputs of machines are somehow worthy of serious consideration as artefacts of human creativity.
Great presentation Mike, listening for the 3rd time
Fantastic and inspiring talk, Mike. Love how forward thinking you are.
thank you!
Interesting presentation, ask people who have trained and worked their entire lives to earn a living as writers, artists, photographers, models, cinematographers etc how they feel about it. The end result is “this is really cool, it will make millions of creatives redundant but they can work in Amazon warehouses … at least until they’re fully robotic … but look I can make a robot dance video in 3 seconds.”
Well, there will be a selection of average and brilliant creators. Guess which category AI will replace first... In terms of modern chart music (electronic kind of pop) I've been wondering for the last 10 years if it's not all recorded by the same producers' team. Much of it show no to little sign of originality. If AI can do the same, fine with me, I don't listen to that anyway.
Amazing! I was an AI skeptic for a long time, but finally started 'playing' with it last fall and now I have this UA-cam channel where I can communicate my passion for mindfulness to the world using AI-generated video. It's just a start, but I'm excited about where we are going.
awesome - video is developing in such amazing ways
same here. Still worried a little where it is all going in the coming years tbh. Great videos actually, I love it, very calming, and nice texts! Which AI-video gen tool do you use?
What stopped you before ai?
Money? There's an entire collection of free software from gimp to blender.
No skill? UA-cam is overflowing with free tutorials.
Art was democratized before ai. Nothing stops you from shooting footage from your phone, learning with tutorials, animating and editing with free software, drawing with free software or, heaven forbid, a pencil.
Truth is you didn't want to learn, nor did you want to pay someone who did bother to learn.
Instead ask a glorified algorithm, trained on the work of real artists without credit or compensation, to do it for free.
The truth is you want what you want regardless of who it hurts or the damage it causes.
@@michaeldougherty363- I would encourage you to take a step out of your bubble and watch the video "AI vs. Artists - The Biggest Art Heist in History". Maybe appreciate what this technology really does and the people it hurts.
Your talk is funny. I know, it's weird sense of humor. This is so good.
Very cool. However, the AI usually spits out banal, basic, and literal interpretations of the text. Its still amazing, and i cant wait to see its potential.
sometimes Zebra sound
This is terrible. The examples are terrible.