Unfortunately, I think the reason that the music industry has avoided this issue is simply the fact that who controls it are the massive studios, not musicians, that hold the rights to the songs. They have also fought for legislation to protect their profits for decades. The art industry simply doesn't have the same power to go after these companies at the moment. Hopefully that changes.
It makes me wonder - there's definitely going to be some (legal) sharks circling as they can smell some blood in the water, and since the US is so litigation-crazy I'm very surprised no well known guys like Sam have been approached by lawyers to set some kind of precedent against this stuff - it would be a very big deal. The US copyright office just refused to copyright an AI produced comic as "there needs to be an element of human authorship for a work to be copyrighted", so that's already something to set a precedent in this field. Do we need art publishing houses the same way we have music publishers who look after songwriter rights? If there's ai trained on someone like Sam, does that give him the right to royalties?
It kinda has a similarity, because large production studious have a hundreds of concept artists on their shoulders. Now, the content produced by those artist are the property of the studio and since art style is not under copyright, a studio can fire 90% of labor, because now it can be done with less budget and just a few ai-skilled people by the same time. The custom corporate ai models are already being trained privately for different purposes, imagine how big is dataset of various images belonging to Disney, and artists who made it have no legal rights to use it. The case for music is a bit hard to understand. I think the progress is slower here because music pieces is a more complex thing than visuals. Its patterns can be purely explained by complex mathematics, but ai companies seems to try the same predictive models as for text. Probably, just need another approach that will solve it better. As an example, now there are simple diffusion models that basically somehow understands the visual graph of sounds and can replicate the similarity by generating variations of those images. I don’t know the full kitchen of this case, but it’s just fascinating how widely digital information can be reinterpreted.
That is true but it is only a matter of time until these studios will adapt ai to their advantage. Let's face it.. legislation just can't keep up with technology.
I am not related to art, I was just researching ai art for business purposes, I've heard that artists are not happy about it and wanted to know why, and stumbled upon your video. Thank you for putting it out there. It honestly blows my mind how people refuse to understand and empathize with your struggle, even if you aren't an artist, it's not freaking hard to imagine what it's like to spend years working on your craft and produce a lot things, and then have those things stolen and the fruits of your labour being used for profit by others. Disgusting. Why the hell would anyone push against you in this matter? Dear artists, please value yourself, you are a gift to the world and your work is immensely valuable, keep fighting for yourselves. I'm a regular person but I will take any chance that I get to speak for your benefit and do what I can to help.
artists are going to need to start fiming their creation to go with the art. stop posting potos of work, and instead post clips panning from side to side without the whole piece in frame.
there are tons of reasons. reason 1 lazy people think they are artist by doing art on using prompots generating images based on pictures of others that worked maybe 40 - 50 hours per image. Reason 2 Copyright problems reason 3 People dont pay for it the artists they pay the companies. (Latestly used ai for testing it and it outputed image based on my original art and i didnt knew it. Already contacted a lawyer because its 100% not allowed even if they claim it on sites. last and most important reason some things in art only some artists are able to do so. With that they destroy there years of work being so unique by makin trash of it.
Because progress. I am in art and design space for more than 20 years, doing both digital and traditional. AI is just another tool. I don't feel threatened by it, nor am I afraid "my style" will be ripped of, as I don't consider my, or anyone's style to be unique, as it is a result of collective civilizational development and a base of visual references humanity created throughout history. Eventually, it all boils down to an idea, the one with better and more creative idea will be the one to come up on top. Regardless of tools and techniques used. And just like traditional or digital art, there will be tons of uncreative, uninspired pieces that are all the same. Should we also talk about digital art from that perspective, and talk about millions of people who came into the art space only after they got access to tools that basically allow them to fix any mistake and redo anything as many times as they want, using guides, references, or just blatantly copying style or ideas from others? Given the times we live in and techniques available to artists, it's hard to draw a line in the sand and say "here's where traditional ends and ai begins". 99% of what you see online would be impossible without digital tools, and most artists that are active today would take completely different career path if they didn't have access to such tools, as it would be too time consuming/difficult/expensive to accomplish the same using only art supplies for most people.
@@yohatch lmao I saw your comments before, your sneaky attempt at looking like you know anything by saying you're in "art and design" space doesn't mean you're an artist or have any idea about anything that's happening, and your further attempts at justifications just solidify you know absolutely nothing. People struggle to define art but it's simply expression of oneself and their ideas through their understanding of the world, it's the skillful use of world elements and manipulating them to their bare bits, the more precise it is the more clear you are at expressing your ideas, which is achieved through a journey of learning every artist goes through, hence becoming more respected in art communities. That's why the artist and their journey is very important with their works and why they are never stripped away from each other, their artwork is the direct result of their life, years of honing a skill and what they want to express from their mind, it's linked to the artist in every way. They lay all the bits units of what makes their art and present it to real world from their mind. Those people, be it traditional means or digital, will use whatever possible to them to make those units and manipulate elements to make their art, they are able to make what they want regardless of medium, be it using stamps, arranging flowers, carving wood, etc, honing the skill of knowing exactly what to do with what they have along with what they want to create is their journey to understand the world and use it to express themselves, and the result is the art they produce. It's a very personal process and to people outside, it looks incomprehensible. That's why artists understand eachother and stand for themselves, they know what's up. I give my digital program to other students in my design club, they are completely clueless, they can't create out of thin air, even after knowing what the program gives them; but I can, and another artist other than me can too, once they understand what they are given in the program. Those people don't have a history of learning and understanding what they want to create, despite knowing how to operate what they are given (programs), and that's the reason they are in our design club, not because they are actually an artist. I can tell you're don't know anything cuz you can't tell how digital and traditional art don't take away the artist's journey in any way, an undo tool is equivalent to a really efficient eraser, there's something undesirable, you erase it, or just undo it, traditionally impossible, digitally possible due to the controlled system we have created. It says nothing about an artist's skills, a pen, colours that aren't limited and cost individually, it's just the removal of mundane tasks that only take time unless someone tries to be creative, but for most, it's just the realistic option to work on a system controlled by them just conveniently. How much money you spend on your art supplies is not what makes you an artist, it's your understanding from what you want to create and what you have. Millions of people coming into art space (as if people didn't just draw in their homes before internet) is just a good thing, meaning people can finally explore their interests and not be burdened by supplies and their cost, both of which are not a determinant of their skills. References are a part of a learning artist's learning tool, and that's where Ai has its place as a tool, to be used as a tool for generalizing a dataset and understanding the most probable direction of art. It's similar to references. It's all for learning purposes to only aid the artist's own art they create themselves. Otherwise whatever people say when they describe Ai as a "tool" is not a tool, they are neither used by artists nor anyone who has any intent of learning from it, it's used to get a poor attempt at creating the most probable image bits corresponding to the words, for the intent of being used as the end product, the the dataset is the actual artists, people who have their respective journeys with their skill and expression. The end result lacks everything that makes an image art, i e. a creator and their individuality, and that's why artists end up being able to differentiate between images created by artists and generated by Ais. So, "it's hard to draw a line" is just a you problem, someone who has no idea what art is. There's no line to be drawn, they are not in the same category to begin with. Same with your fantastical thinking that digital artists can't draw traditionally.
This guy (Sam) doesn't really struggle. Yeah he faced some unpleasant idiots who sent him AI images to taunt him, but he'll survive. He has 2 million followers on Instagram alone. People know that he does art for real, not with AI. He is set for life. His following will only grow, people will buy his prints, buy his Patreon etc. However, artists younger than him, his fans, artists that are in earlier stage of their career than him... are f*cked Some idiots trolled me too, by sending me AI copies that were based on my work. But I don't have 2 million followers, I have 72 followers, since I started my Instgram only in mid-2022. My work is good (I've been told) but nobody cares anymore, because AI images flood instagram. I don't even work digitally, but with traditional methods, but still nobody cares. And you can't even get anyone to look at your work, unless you post Instagram Reels. This was changed by IG earlier this year
@ChristianIce in another comment had a point. Tho even I don't know how applicable it is... It's funny tho... How are Ai art making money? Is it that it's cheaper than going to meet an artist to offer a commission? If so, then I'd see why companies would want to get rid of us, use our already existing art pieces to make more art. But isn't there a limit tho... As far as creativity goes... Artificial intelligence will never be like the human mind... But it's pointless seeing how ppl who go to artist just needs some good display to hang over Thier businesses or whatever. Art means nothing to them regardless. It's not Thier fault, but ig that's just the way things are... STOP AI ART💯💯💯... LET'S SEE JUST WHAT WE CAN DO!. Even if art loses all use... I'll still make art. LETS GOOOO
I’m not an artist but now I’m pretty mad at the big ai corporations rn, like they can’t just swoop in and yoink the art work that people put hours and passion in, sending support to people that are experiencing this, merry Christmas btw
thank you so much, we need the support of non-artists more than anything in this situation, because not everyone understands why we artists are so upset by this.
you would be surprised to know that this is not exclusive to "big corporations", machine learning people are creating more models every week and putting it out like toys for kids, if you have a high end pc you dont even need a big corporation remote pc to use it, it's basically out for anyone now, for free
Name one game company or film studio that's accepting A.I. (Machine Learning)-produced work over human-produced work. I'll wait. At worst, A.I. just gives a bunch of unskilled amateurs a toy to use and places like DeviantArt a new niche of kitschy crap that already exists aplenty by human "artists." At best, A.I. is a tool that can help truly skilled, truly worthwhile artists speed up their production and assist with their human-produced work--if they so choose. Folks are panicking over nothing.
I'm sorry, ai big corporations? Can you name a few? These are barely a group of developers or researches. Stop building up narrative for yourself, there's no conspiracy theory of greedy capitalists trying to take artist's jobs.
@@arkapatra9852 I'd say it's not a matter of improving your skills so much as asking yourself whether you make art more for the joy of creation or more for the money.
@@pokemonfan2630 I hope that is sarcasm. Being an artist is a satisfying profession. Rarely anyone becomes a labourer or cleaner because they are passionate about it, but most artists love what they do. Money is a second factor.
@@arkapatra9852 Money is very important though, I wouldn't say it's a second factor. Passion first, for oneself, but without money you're nothing. I've seen artists crying on twitter because they don't make enough money on some months and barely afford food or living. Please speak for yourself.
whats wild to me, is when people have such little disrespect for artists, and act like AI will replace artists and what we should just accept it and stop trying to make art... when in actuality AI art is dependent on said artist to function.. like how ironic can you be 😭
Bro I'm just trying to use AI to make ai videos and stuff so I can use it to promote a game series I'm making on Julians editor because I don't have actual actors to make things like that, it's not like I'm being paid for it or anything
Is it too late to cease Ai? Will everyone be laid off by Ai? Will Ai jobloss be the new normal? Swell robots doing everything. All so we can obey an Ai new world order?
@@ProteinProteinProteinProteinplease start practicing how to draw and maybe youll be able to make your game series!! you can use stock images for realistic scenes
As an artist myself i think they should pay artists for art to be fed to the AI and should give credit. (edit: tysm for so many likes) I also think that Ai art should just leave artists bc at this point it's just problematic.
@Olive I wouldn't be surprised if these companies get sued. I really think the artists should get together and get a GoFundMe started. I would donate and I know a lot of fans would. Corporations stealing from hardworking people yet again.
@@littleripper312 no one can sue them . even i am not artist but a software engineer and this AI which we considered in the last months as Hollywood fantasy it became a danger for developers also by creating tools like chatgpt which can create a whole website in 5 min . the sad thing is that they are the developers who created this tool to mae other dev loose their jobs .
@@anonymouse257 an image you look at that inspires you to create something entirely different is not the same as stealing a photo and poorly photobashing it without credit. The two are not anywhere close to the same so it blows my mind how people keeo pretending its an argument LOL
The scary thing is that this isn't limited to 2d art. I'm a 3d artist, and there are already early versions of 3d model and environment generation AIs. I feel scared that these are just gonna get more better and eventually replace some of us.
Hopefully this tech can be regulated if people can fight to make it better. If it makes you feel better 3d modeling may be harder to train because the data sets are not as accessible or large as 2D datasets.
I'm a 2d artist, and I wholeheartedly support the 3d community. Please stand up for yourselves and for any others, because the more we talk back, the faster we will win
I'm tired of not knowing if an art piece is AI or not. When I see something I like, I want to be able to find the artist to see more of their work. Now I feel like the only thing I see is AI art and it creates so much distrust for me on the internet, when it's become so difficult to tell them apart - what's made by an AI and what's made by real human beings. I tend to not feel like using any art websites because I have such mixed feelings whenever I go on there. Like pinterest and deviantart among others... it makes me really sad.
What's interesting is that the companies making these models just auto scrape images from the web and because of what you're talking about they are scraping tons of AI generated images now and it's screwing up all the models to the point where they are probably all going to start developing methods to tag AI art. But there's only so much new art and many artists are starting to use new tech that "poisons" their art against being used in AI. So honestly even if these companies find a way to innovate, they won't have much new data to work with and models will likely actually get worse
Tbh even at this moment a.i art is very predictable. If i see something a.i it'll make me feel like I've seen something exactly like this before. With actually artist you have the same feeling but it's more distinct and less uncanny
why do you care if its ai or not? Do you care when you see cool sunset if its a natural occurance or pollution of plants that makes some cool colors in sunset. Its still a cool enjoyable sunset, it is what it is. if you like its I think its bad to make it worse for yourself by second guessing the nature of it. If its good for you- let it be just good. Any art is just a repetition in some way. AI is just easier to make in a moment (but code and all programming behind is an art by itself, not counting macine time to teach the model)
A woman came to an art studio i'm studing in around a week ago. The woman was interested in interior sketches and it is obvious she had to learn how perspective works, how to build objects from different angles, how colours work, how different matherials to be represented accurately and so on. Mentor told her to pick a picture of interior she would like to draw and this way the woman will be learning basics and enjoying the process at the same time. The woman replied 'but i want to draw from my imagination!', the mentor told to her for around next 20 minutes and convinced her to pick a picture and begin. A woman found 'basics' like searching for eye level alone boring and she constantly repeated she wants to be able to take a sheet of paper and draw a scetch of cool interior right in front of a client in 10 minutes. She kept repeating it's supposed to be simple lines and not what she's been taught here with all those measurements, ruler, eye level and points... She tried her best to 'make everyone in the studio to release *the secret* how to draw better, some secret formula of success'. She talked to everyone, asked questions, but she definetely were looking for some 'short way' and moved to another person getting previous one shall not spill a thing. The conclusion is most of people don't understant that there is no 'short cut', they don't understand amount of work to be done. It is so simple for them! Just draw another art, what is so hard about that, why are you crying a river! Oh yeah... and those are defending and using AI. I hope it will rebel against its users and respect those he learned from.
Artists gatekeep all the time. It's nothing new. Like when it came to digital art, traditional artists didn't consider them artists. There are countless examples, artists gatekeeping from the beginning of time -- with ai art, it's nothing new.
Well, as long as they truthfully state it’s Ai generated and don’t try to claim it’s handmade, I don’t see how the foot race metaphor holds up. A more apt one would be a runner calling someone participating in NASCAR a fraud since they don’t use their legs to race. It’s not the same race!
@@o_o474 you both are so out of the loop, its not about being an artists that uses ai whats the issue, its using other peoples work without their permission to create said work, so in this case when there are better regulations and protection for artists then yeah we will tell you that if you do ai art you suck, because you are stealing, once that get solved then sure call yourself artist or whatever, as long as you keep up with people that actually learned how to make iterations and fixes (the fundamentals of art) while using that same ai, in order to get unique looking work that is :). By then the analogy would be like when mathematicians use a calculator vs a regular person
@@the-ai-art dude its not like artists are losing their job. We know how people are fucking dumb and they cant polish AI produced art, so they still need artist. You just missing the point of the video. Its about using somebody's art without their consent. There would've be zero problem, if they only used art bases(forms, colors, perspective, shapes, compositions, depth etc, not someone's finished art) in their databases. But they DO use it, and its the problem we trying to bring attention. But people like you instead replying "LaZy ArtiSt canT AdApt" just making things too dramatic. Its more law and ethic troubles, not "gAteKeePinG"
I dunno why, but this video made me cry. I always thought " my art isn't good enough to be stolen and used for AI", but the idea that other artists are having a piece of them stolen and to be told it's not a big deal when they speak up is just depressing.
The reason why people don't really care about how the artist is feeling is because they gained more out of AI than out of Artis . This is why as artists we are disregarded and stolen from. We as Artis are being raided and the people who supported us are gaining from it .
It's literally the essence of a group of humans, greedy, selfish, and impatient. We are better than them and we must be against A.I art as it still takes our sweat and blood.
@@WorldOfConsequence So your saying in that case, because the amount of effort and love put into art and the long time to create it that it’s perfectly fine to steal it? Oh well in that case I should steal peoples music cause it takes too long, or I could steal houses cause they take too long to build, actually with that logic I could steal just about anything. Your also mad cuz they CHARGE for their work?? Making art can be a profession and a way to get money, some people need art to survive, and it already doesn’t make the best pay so to say it’s FINE to steal their work cuz your mad that they are a human being instead of an AI which can’t make its own art without taking a HUMAN’S piece of art? I may seem rude but I just want you to understand that art is something that people can work really hard on, and it’s important to value them
Genuinely I wish AI artists would stop this. I've never been a snobby artist but I will be snobbier than a millionaire if it means defending the talent I've been developing since I was in 5th grade. I have control of my own hand or pencil. Sure they can make a pretty anime girl, but I can go in with my own hands and fix her jawline, her hair, the background or hands to make them look natural, or make them look the way I intended as a human. I put my art out there so I can make people proud and feel inspired, not so it can be stolen and used by rich bastards.
@@Mr_Mistah I'm talking about the companies the AI artists use, not the AI artists themselves. Don't know why you're tryna start something with me though.
The thing is, the AI artists can also do all those things to bring their vision to life, they just need to get good enough to draw the outline and then have the model adhere rigidly to the shape while the AI fills in the colours and fine detail. "AI Artists" are not as big an issue as "Artists using AI".
I don’t really have anything else to say that hasn’t already been said, so I’m just commenting on this video for the algorithm because more people need to see this and educate themselves.
@@Foam_Woa nothing, it's just something I pointed out I still agree that AI artists are lazy Making meals in the microwave is more akin to making professional art in MSpaint
@@romeosraThe thing is you have flexibility with a paint brush, you have the ability to move the camera, with AI, you just fill it with a shit ton of prompts with no real consistency. People have said with photography that it isn't art, but with photography: you can change how you frame it, what filters you use, how you take the photo, etc. Many variables that go into making photography make it a solid art form, and these variables allow it to be mended and molded into new forms. Sure your shot might look a bit blury if you do something wrong but it might add to the photo. Which brings me to why me and many others don't think AI should be making art. It's not a tool like a paintbrush, it's more of a pencil to mark the sketch. AI art is devoid of mistakes, devoid of flexibility, creativity, and originality. You give it a prompt and it will not, nor ever, make something original or that breaks the status quo that human artists can. What it generates is devoid of mistakes, and as bob ross said "Mistakes are just happy accidents." They don't make a painting worse, they make it human and more artistic. And as for flexibility, you can't ajust its settings or position like you can with a camera. It's always random, no consistency in style whatsoever. And as for creativity/originality. The human mind is a harbinger of ideas and artistic creativity, AI just works off of said images and never makes anything new. But this doesn't mean AI art isn't completely bad. It can be used as a tool for inspiration in ideas since it is good at melding ideas together. You can't get anything new from it but you can interpret what it means and use what you think it means as inspiration. It's just nobody uses it for that and they just want their "Original character, my little pony, purple, in the style of [random tumblr artist]." It can be used in making art, not for making art. tl;dr: read through the whole thing since this is a nuanced subject and can't be explained in one sentence.
I've been gaslighted time and time again after I said AI "art" was unethical. Someone tried to guilt me by saying "but, but, but what about people who are disabled who can't draw" "you're gatekeeping art". No, I'm standing with artists who put their hearts and souls into every brush stroke. AI is setting a dangerous precedent.
They keep pretending it's used for the "good" and to "help" a group of people when in the first place, they're targeting struggling passionate people. What about the disabled artists they scraped art from for their datasets huh?
Yeah that and there are plenty of disabled artists that get by just fine. I know at least one that can only use his eyes. Don't fall for the gaslighting.
It is undeniable that there are good outcomes to AI art, such as allowing people with disabilities to produce high fidelity artwork. HOWEVER, the question we'll need to answer is: does the ends justify the means? I don't think the good outcomes of AI art justify the theft of millions of artworks.
I am so glad that you are addressing this topic Sam! This isn’t a situation that people should be taking lightly and dismissing. As an artist myself, I hope the people that support AI art know how much AI is hurting the art community.
i don’t think it’s right to target “ai art” as a issue though. this is my first time learning about this issue but it feels like people are finding the art that ai generates as competition for real artists, with that being a big problem. In that sense i don’t think it’s justified to stop ai art, but i do see the problems with taking human art and using it as training data. even with that, ai doesn’t ‘copy directly’ but forms patterns based on the data it analysis so there is something to be argued there
@@cyanic3032 Ai art takes already existing art and mixes it with other art to create stuff. it's literally stealing, i don't understand your point there is literally nothing to argue.
@@angelicloli9381 It doesn't. AI generates completely new images. As Sam explained in the video, since AI doesn't have human experience and habits, but is trained to "believe" that it's input data is "correct" - it tends to create completely identical replicas to it's input data in part and in whole. AI generated images made by AI trained with small datasets may look like photocollage because the AI is "trying" to be "correct". If a computer engineer could prove that AI literally does photocollage, this would be a non-issue and shut down by a bunch of copyright claims. The issue is that AI does generate brand new images with incredible likeness to existing copyrighted material and for monetary profit. Those images were input into AI datasets without the owners' consent. This is the "data laundering" Sam talked about in the video. This needs new rules and regulations that haven't been made yet since the technology is new and growing. There have been several issues like this with rapidly growing technology in the past few years. It's caused by the incredible speed at which technology in general and computer software in particular is advancing. To illustrate this issue - imagine if there were no horses, carriages or asphalt roads and then one day someone would invent the car. Humanity would need years to regulate traffic laws to catch up with the existence of the automobile, while suffering from heavy losses to life and property because of accidents. There were no rules or regulations regarding the collection of art into datasets and now it's being used to train AI and make a monetary profit. Some artists' livelihood is currently being hurt, but we can all hope that eventually there will be laws put in place that allow human artists and AI art to coexist peacefully.
@@Shining4Dawn "human artists and AI art to coexist peacefully" that can be possible ONLY if the AI is trained to look for copyright free images ( the CC licence). As long as it keeps taking copyrighted material ( on top of various datas that are globally protected by PRIVACY laws) there cannot be any peace. Slavery cannot be supported and supporting a tool that makes bank off UNPAID labor is not the future.
If you do some study about the music business in last 100 years, you’ll find a big chunk of it is about how talents are being taken advantage of by the business men. But slowly musicians fought back. I think you’re absolutely right and it’s time for artists to do the same. Sadly there’s no easy path.
I'm a musician too-I use samples to compose music. A synthesizer is an instrument which is loaded with preset sample patches designed by sound egineers and loaded into hardware/software. A musician then composes with those patches to make an original piece of music.
as an artist we need to take this fight seriously and plan our every move as a collective we can spread awareness, sure, but we need to take action aswell
Very well put, Sam. It’s honestly sad and scary how some of these people who side with the AI generators are acting. Their toxicity and lack of understanding of the situation and why artists feel the way they do looks like insanity to me. Hopefully in the near future we can have more open discussion about where we’re all coming from and this issue can be resolved. Merry Christmas, Sam & all.
Most artists are very entitled to begin with. They act like they're owed a job in the industry. News flash: You are not owed a job in the industry. It is no one's job to pay for your career. It has always been like this. Throughout human history, only a small fraction of artists land a job in the field. Most of them do not get a career because they don't adapt to new technology OR their art never had market value to begin with. If your job is so disposable that an AI could learn it in seconds, why would you feel entitled to other people funding your career? The art world has always been about theft/ stealing from other visual inspirations. Every artist steals, and AI just happens to be the ultimate thief. This is not a fight that artists can win, because AI art is considered transformative art at the end of the day. As soon as it borrows from multiple art styles, it is considered transformative enough to be its own. Artists must learn to adapt and create a style that cannot be replicated. It's up to artists, complain and trauma-bond for sympathy, or get to work and learn to adapt to the industry. You cannot stop the progress of new technology just because you feel entitled to a job. The needs of the many far outweigh the needs of the few. Also, if AI was stopping you from being an artist, I question if you ever really cared about making art to begin with. Seems more like you just want people to fund your career.
@@raven3696Ohhh like the Lena image? I think that cappuccino just meant for the AI’s systems to be re-organized, since it’s current build is problematic. I agree with their statement, but it shoulda been more specific. (No hate at all)
@@raven3696 you don't exist without us, ai bro. Stopping your freedom of stepping on others isn't censorship, you're just a baby. Tell me, what history are we repeating; because right now, we are repeating the history of corporate's exploitation of innocent hard working individuals once again, gaining all the cash with little to no work put in all for the 'sake of progress' dog whistle. Exploitation is not progress, it's regression, go back to the smog and acid air days of the industrial revolution where that mindset belongs xD
I was just starting to see the improvement in my art skills, but after reading about the damage AI is currently doing; it felt like as if someone just walked right in, smacked my head and said "we don't need people like you anymore". I really had a hard time drawing consistently after that, but after seeing the Artstation protest and then watching this master piece; It feels like we art babies have a chance to follow the footsteps of our art gods and make a career out of something we love to do. Thank you for this, it really means a lot :)
@@deltaxcd it will once regulations are placed. It won't be wild west of art theft forever. 20 years ago art wasn't even close to the diversity and quality it has today. And its all thanks to the huge amount of artists creating tirelessly over the last 2 decades. Ai art can spit out what it has consumed. If we stop putting our work out there or if we choose to opt out... well the Parasite will die if you don't feed it. Once we get it retrained with legal stuff and only those who choose to be opted in will remain in datasets then the situation will be quite different. It will be the tool it is supposed to be not some magical box spitting "original" art because it's not. What we have today is a machine thats standing on the shoulders of all the artists whose works have been fed in without consent. Machines do not reference or get inspired, overfitting, generating, filtering.. maybe but definitely not drawing and painting, if anyone is trying to convince you they do they LIE.
Honestly I’ve loved making art my whole life, and I consider myself to be pretty good at it too. But this AI situation has made me loose all of my motivation to draw,, it’s sad how those assholes who are too lazy to do anything for themselves think they are so much better than actual artits
@@linschannel_ assuming that it will happen as you say, which I highly doubt, what Ai does even now is already enough to destroy concept art as carrier. So washt I ask is do you expect that all progress will be erased and all ai apps will be banned and we will go back in time? and you don't fully understand how it works as you don't need to feed it it that much art it is learning on real world data and photos. art is only needed for style and otherwise it is absolutely useless to AI for any real training. yes some models are trained on art rather than real world data and in that situation yes it can't produce anything new what it did not see already but that i more of limitation for the use of AI than some copyright infringement because it is so horribly limited in what content it can produce that it is next to useless (but not totally useless.) All the current fuss is mostly about concept art which is nothing else that photobashing of ideas and that area of art is done for artists. You can forget this topic. it is already fully automated and artists no longer needed. I never liked concept art anyway so don't care about Ai or artist who make it. But in areas of meaningful art AI cannot do much at least yet. I guess it may learn to do it some time later bit it will be different than just feeding example and writing prompts.
I don’t really have anything else to say that hasn’t already been said, so I’m just commenting on this video for the algorithm because more people need to see this and educate themselves.
I've posted this on my FB page. This is the most intelligent PoV I've seen to date. I'm "old school" from the 70's - 90's, pre-digital for most of what I love. I own over 400 art books. I own many posters & prints. I'm not anti-digital. I used to love Googling images of specific artists, spending hours on Deviant Art. I'm a fan, not an artist, and I wholeheartedly stand by you Sam.
Sadly it is spreading disinfo tho. The 1:1 replicas that are shown are fake. These are not direct outputs of the trained latent space. These are done with Image2Image mode. So basically you can input any image that the model has never seen before (even a selfie of you that you jsut shot a second ago) and let the model alter it very slightly. This is comparable to applying a photoshop filter. The mob never states this fact tho to make it more convincing to get their biased argument across. These models are way way more transformative than a lot human output. If not all of human output. Since The output of these models is an amalgamation of many millions of learned concepts. That is also the reason why the finetuned models that are trained on the UA-camrs artwork is looking way, way better than his original artwork. They do not use stencils or snippets of existing artwork as most antiAI-people say. This is not how this technology works at all.
@@pbhandsdown1046 Okay, you dissproved one argument. But artists aren't mad that AI will become better then humans. Artists are mad that AI is taking their copyrighted work without ANY permission or ANY credit. I would have been cool, even honored if AI took my art, if it had something like a list of credits. I like AI art, just not how it's made. I think it's a VERY fun idea. But, can't they use work that isn't copyrighted? Or, again, atleast give credit. Maybe you can dissprove more points? (Im sorry for my english, but im Polish.)
@@ThatWeirdGuy43 no not really true if i look back. Dall-E 1 took the same type of scraped data and noone cared. Why did noone care back then? becasue it looked like crap. But now it looks very legit and in some/many cases even better than human output. This is why there is NOW outrage and not a year ago. I would bet an eye that if the models outputs would look like garbage noone would care. To give you another argument. Everything is remixed and sampled in some way nowadays. Do you like hiphop? well it is based on using breakbeatsections of old funk tracks from the 70s and Turntablists (DJs) using two of the same record and loop them via crossfading. This whole genre (the msot popular genre in music rn) has sprung into existence out of sampling others work in a transformative way. Sure training the Image models is in so far different as it is way way more efficient at iterating and blending between different learned cocnepts, styles and motifs. But in it's raw principle it is not really different than hiphop. Especially since ti is sparking new forms/media of art. For example AIanimation or using reallife footage as inputs to dream over and making animated dreams of that data. Or if you want to think a bit further creating full feature lwength movies out of a vast latent space being the result of all of humanities publically avaliable data. "but wait so it is the work of others that created this right?" no it is not. You need 5 thousand A100 GPU's to train these models. These GPUs cost about 20k - 30k dollar each alone. Running them takes a lot of money to spend. The data that has been consentually shared on different platforms such as instagram, deviant art and co falls under fair use as long as you use that data transformatively. Since thsoe models DO NOT CREATE ANY SORT OF STENCIL of the original imagery and do not use a single bunch of pixels from the originals but instead learn (yes jsut like a human brain) visual concepts and have them embedded together with their Text description ( collected via webpage metatext) into latentspace. Latentspace is a sort of visual library similar to a mindmap ot a plot of concepts where similar concepts or visual characteristics are closer to each other and form clusters so to say. These do not contain the input images as i said but instead learned cocnepts on what are the characteristics of those images. How is a sky shaded, how is an eye drawn, how is a cute cartoon dog stylized. That is pretty similar to the internal images you see in your mind when imagining something (unless you have aphantasia) If i tell you to imagine a picture of an anime boy fighting a dragon you have an fuzzy image in your mind right? You see things like how an eye is drawn or how the boy is smirking while grabing onto his sword to slay the dragon. This is pretty much how these models work. Just as you have seen a lot of anime that tought your brain how anime is looking those models do similar connections and form their visual library. Sure they are not making creative decissions other than interpolating between those concepts to match a given input prompt or input image by the user to generate the best fitting output corresponding to a position in that multidimensional latentspace(for example crude painting you made in paint and load into the model of a pose with a prompt like " knight holding a sword" I do not mean training tho just using the model.) So as an artist myself that worked traditionally, digitally, in 2d and 3d and with AI I can tell you this is extremely transformative. Maybe more transformative than anything i have ever seen tbh. Sure it uses the dataset to learn concepts right. But the output is still not the input. So banning this would mean to have consistency you would need to ban all of anime (same style) all of fanart and cosplay (design and style of private IP) all of reviews for movies and games (copyrighted material is being used without consent- sometimes to critique/discredit the reviewed product) and tbh the most scary part... research of other AI modfels such as large language models like gpt-4 which could ultimately solve many humanitarian problems and make humanity way more productive.. or even algorhythmy like AlphaFold which is currently being used to create a lotz of medical advancements and was just exactly like those image models trained on data of individuals that have not given SPECIFIC CONSENT to be trained into those proteinfolding systems. So if we would heavily restrict datascraping we would ultimately not save as many lifes as we would otherwise since we would slow down progress and 10 million die yearly of cancer alone (which might be curable thru those technologies) Do not forget that Art is one of the smallest parts of AI research. Who says that text data like the scraped data used to train language models is not as well fair to use for research after the artists-against-art mob has their say in a trial. I fear we are not doing the right thing in combatting this to save the old status quo but are in fact delaying necessary reformation of our whole system since those algos are coming FAST. and any month not spent on makin our society future proof will cause much more devastation and chaos later when the majority of people WILL BE AFFECTED by automation and us not having mechanisms to combat this systemic problem in place. Honestly a big disservice to humanity if you ask me. And I am an artist that studied contemporary arts at a acedemy (painting) and works since a decade in the entertainment industry as a creative. So I am well aware about the disruption and pain this causes to artists. but still this is a necessary evil thinking about climate change, world hunger, cancer and so on. We wont be alone as creative workers. This will hit MOST industries sooner than most people might think. Hell I am heavy into machine learning since a decade and it hit even me out of the blue how great diffusion models became all of a sudden. Hope this brings you a bit of my perspective on the subject and why i have this opinion. I want the best for all of us. And the current situation (pre AI) is not it. in fact its a living hell for many people on this planet.
Is it too late to cease Ai? Will everyone be laid off by Ai? Will Ai jobloss be the new normal? Swell robots doing everything. All so we can obey an Ai new world order?
I'm a computer scientist, and it saddens me to see the toxicity from users toward artists, derived from the existence of these AI models. There's no justification for that, and there will never be. The way current AIs work is definitely too close to the source and that needs to be taken into account for evaluating the ethics of those models, before we go out of our ways to monetize and capitalize on these models. I do hope that the laws will catch up quickly with this, and people will be prevented from continuing to capitalize on models trained using copyrighted data obtained without a license. As you mentioned the models *could* be trained exclusively on open-source and public domain images (I don't like the term copyright-free, because in most cases, it's not true -- having a permissive license doesn't cancel out copyright, only public domain does, and public domain doesn't exist in all countries), although this will very definitely result in much lower quality models with lower quality output -- not because permissive licensed art is inferior, but because there's less quantity of it. That said, I do believe that with enough evolution of the technologies used for AI art, in the future we could get to a point where the process used by AI will be unique and original. But this will require that the models learn about shapes and colors, instead of learning how to predict what an image looks like based on a prompt and random noise. I do not believe that creativity is a special thing that only fleshy brains can have, but rather an emergent property of the complex abstraction that our brain does, which is orders of magnitude more nuanced than current AI models (regardless of their size) can hope for.
I'm an artist who thinks this "No to A.I." movement is largely emotionally-based panic. But I do greatly appreciate your rational view given here and agree with most of it. The only caveat I find here is that, at least here in the Western Hemisphere, I see no way one can enforce laws against A.I. technology merely analyzing existing copyrighted works without it also affecting human artists from doing the same. The same space human artists have to merely observe, study, and emulate another's artwork (without directly plagiarizing them), is the same space that creators of A.I. (Machine Learning) models are using (or exploiting, depending how you view it). The giant "loophole" with A.I., if you will. It's technically just capitalizing upon what's legal for humans because you can't copyright a style, nor can you stop someone from analyzing a publicly-displayed copyrighted work and creating a different new result from such analysis. I think the only way around this issue is that those companies building A.I. models are just going to have to make the decision to "opt-out" of using established copyright works on their own, to appeal to the people, rather than being enforced by policy. Or, as you say, to "get to a point where the process used by AI will be unique and original" somewhat on its own. Though, even with such a "point," A.I. image production will still always rely upon emulation of provided data. Humans will always serve as a machine's source of data, in some way. The only question, really, is who's willing to serve as the data? I think an "opt-in' option as the default will help alleviate most of this matter. It's really the only true option I see as quelling concerns.
@@BrianLockett there's enough data already on the internet, it has no big need for more art. I agree that it is emotionally based but to be fair it's the same way book writers panicked when the printing press was made. They were treasured and then suddenly there was no more need for them even though they loved what they did. Same thing is happening to artists, there will be no need for them to exist anymore in the business and commission world. They can still draw or whatever but they will be preoccupied with another job like an office or retail one which will dam their passion. Some people might seek them out though for the sake of aesthetic, the same way painters are brought to weddings to paint scenes instead of photographers. But there won't be a need for a giant selection of artists as there is now. There's million of us right now but in the future only a thousand or even a hundred might be wanted.
I really wanna thank you for enlightening me. As someone from the IT segment, I wasn't really aware of how messy the situation is for artists. I regret being the "artists need to adapt" person after knowing about all this. Thank you.
The best kind of person. I’m happy people like you are around. There are unfortunately people who will learn about all this and still stand by AI and it’s unethical uses
@@zlkanglwrth2776 Clearly you haven’t even watched the video before commenting. Automation isn’t the problem here, it is about consent and protecting the artists from theft.
What makes me most upset about this whole situation is how aggressively heartless people's reactions are. Not only do people not care, they celebrate the downfall of artists. It is said AI generated art lacks soul & humanity... my dude, somewhere along the way society has ALREADY lost this
lol what? youre seeing only the worst of the worst of the worst of "people" almost everyone in the real world (AKA people that actually touch grass) undersrands the value of true art ai art vids ATTRACT talentless doucheb@g techbros that wanna "own the elites" just cause theyre bitter over their own failures in life just like a vid on trans rights or minority rights attract conservash!te 12 year old trolls and ruzzian bots' hate speech. vids like this attract talentless douchy techbros and they are STILL the EXTREME minority even here in the place where they gather.
100% agree…remember a time where everything we bought was handmade, high quality and long lasting, AND affordable? Now we can enjoy 70% plastic clothes and cheap plastic electronics that break down or stop receiving critical updates a few years in, or incompatible with other electronics to force you to buy new models. For a price that should make people angry, and also make people angry that they end up in the landfills so quickly. You would think with producing things nauseatingly cost effective everything should be far cheaper than it actually is. But no. The 1 percenters absolutely need their private jets, private islands and private yachts. They even create movies about social inequality to laugh at their own jokes…while 75% of the population survives paycheck to paycheck. It’s a whole circus out here. Us artists have the front row seats…
I feel you. True human creativity enriches the world around us. If society values soulless, mass produced products rather than something truly unique and special then there's some major issues with what we place our value on.
Nobody celebrate the downfall of artist, they celebrate the superiority of AI. Something being better than you doesn't make you less talented, that's a loser mentality.
@@TheEllord33 The only one here who has a loser’s mentality is you by having no empathy for others who actually put effort into something that they’re passionate about
Not an artist here, but I have very close friends who I see family who are. They put their souls into their art pieces, and it’s important to them. If something I cared about have been invalidated like this, I would be angered as well. This doesn’t mean that I’m not frustrated about this though. For myself, writing is how I express my feelings just like these artists and they have been used to make more works of art. All in all, just be kind to each other and considerate.
it's not even "invalidated" , it's directly stolen. It was taken without permission, reproduced without permission and as shown in the video, used to take sales away from the original artists by defrauding them of their work. It's been illegal to modify another person's works of art without permission for quite a while...and this company did exactly that. Heck, my dad sued a person that made a paint-based reproduction of one of his photographs who then sold it for like 40x what the photo was initially worth. There wasn't even enough deviation to consider it an original work...it was a photo-realistic copy of the original. There was more to it than it just being taken as well, but I don't remember
It's not even about craft. many of the 100s of millions of AI art made every day now, is people wanting to see pictures that don't exist. it's not just lack of patience, it's demand for what's new and personally appealing to us each. I know its hard for artists but AI has proven to be very beneficial for mental health and stress. even in hospitals now. In the future artists should be compensated when their work is scraped to make these programs.
All they had to do was find the artists they are interested in on Art Station (if they have an account) and do a collaboration. I get that not everyone can afford art and they want cheaper alternatives but we still have to look at the disadvantages.
As a programmer, I'm with the artists on that. We can't let these companies to stole and monetize others work. Machine learning will need to adapt to a limited set of data or need to somehow simulate creativity in order to create their own art
AI is a tool, unfortunately its a exploitative tool in how its been implemented and regulated. And it will be a widely used tool unfortunately, but it needs to be restrained and regulated. And until it can be so it should be halted and expunged.
artists should just unite, and develop (through crowd funding) their own open source/free access AI art generating algorithm, to disable the use of AI for commercial purposes.
This literally made my heart ache. As someone who've been part of a journalism organization (/who writes), and who has passion for art, it is really frustrating when dealing with intellectual property issues . There's nothing more upsetting than seeing something you create with your whole heart and pure passion to get exploited or your efforts be taken for granted. Hope this video will raise awareness for many people. Thank you, Sam!
In a much older video speaking about the emergence of AI and automation and how its gonna make human unemployable, There are a few analogies that represents situations like this: "perhaps your barista is the only one that can make your mochachino caffe latté just the way you like it, but most people won't care and just want a decent cup of coffee."
The irony of AI art bros is that they tell us artists to shut up and deal with it, but they cry about ppl stealing or mimmicing their AI art prompts. The hypocrisy is hilarious.
Genuinely I wish AI artists would shut up. I've never been a snobby artist but I will be snobbier than a millionaire if it means defending the talent I've been developing since I was in 5th grade. I have control of my own hand or pencil. Sure they can make a pretty anime girl, but I can go in with my own hands and fix her jawline, her hair, the background or hands to make them look natural. I put my art out there so I can make people proud and feel inspired, not so it can be stolen and used by rich bastards.
Yeah I saw someone bitching about prompts getting leaked on ChatGPT store. The irony of not even understanding your own whiny entitlement and getting pissy when people rip you off
One, nobody serious does that. Two, AI artists don't exist, unless you're counting the computer, which I don't. Three, everyone in this situation is a complete crybaby.
I'm an artist and I work as a graphic designer. Like a month ago, when Lenza hype started, I had a huge mental breakdown because of it. I really tried to talk to people online about this issue but man yes, there's SO much of toxicity in AI community. Most people just laughed at me. Told me things like my job is useless, that I should just go work to McDonald's and if machine is better than me it means I suck at what I do. There were very few people who wanted to really talk about this and hear my out. I just don't understnad where this hatered towards (especially visual) artists come from. I feel like visual artist are very underappreciated and now with AI they will be even more because everyone can create a nice pricutre.
Shocking. I don't think they realize their jobs are next on the chopping block. I am not a designer myself, but find a lack of empathy concerning. Machines and ai will be better than humans in everything at some point. It is only a matter of time.
You talked with wrong people. The AI can enhance your workflows. It can help you do your work more effective. Give you inspiration, etc. You just have to adapt, but that is part of life. Cheers!
@@nemhauser This is exactly what the ai folk is saying and want him to think. Some of the ai tools are marketed as direct replacement for artists, not to mention IP theft an masse. Not sure if you are just short sighted or part of the problem.
I think artists might have to go offline and sell physical copies of their work advertised as "Non-AI generated", "All Natural", "painted/drawn by humans". Perhaps even recording the process of painting it as proof. People are still impressed by human skill so perhaps the process could be monetized rather than the final product, almost like a performance. And selling the art offline would ensure that it's not entered into a database and used in the AI algorithm. That is until they change the system to not use copyrighted works or make it so that artists are not opted in by default.
and it’s even worse considering just the sheer amount of artists who use social media to promote and sell their artwork. It’s like we’re having to move a step back in time because of AI.
@@prettysureimhere Not because of AI, moreso because these people have been posting publically-available copies of their work online for anyone to copy..
offline artistry is an incomprehensibly slow and cost-ineffective approach tho. if abour 10% of all viewers purchase your product, think of how many people you can reach on the street vs how many people you can reach on the internet. Its just... unsurvivable at that point
@@Pyrrho_ exactly because of AI art. Because artists now know the threat of AI stealing their art and using it for commercial gains, many future artists will be scared to reach out online, resulting almost a step back in time and going back to selling art outside of the online world.
@@Killerbee4712 exactly! And going offline isn’t a worldwide solution either. Artists exist all over the world, not just in 1st world countries where “going offline” might be “viable” even if you have to bust your ass to do it
I actually just cried watching this. Thank you for speaking up on this topic - the bullying from AI promoters against artists is truly insensitive and lacking empathy. 😭
When the whole AIs trained specifically on your style originally happened, someone posted about it on a facebook art group I'm in. And among the discussion, this dude. This dude replied to me and said "well, if he was any good, he wouldn't be replaced by AI" So yeah, you heard here first folks! If Sam Does Art was any good as an artist, he would not be replaced by the AI trained specifically on Sam Does Art artstyle, which would not exist without Sam Does Art's skills.
Can you honestly expect unempathetic mediocre people to self reflect that their precious eye candy wouldn't exist if there wasn't a talented, hard-working HUMAN who made the art in the first place. Don't bother with these people, for they were always wishing for things to be this way because they are jealous that they don't have the same commitment, drive, or Imagination needed to be anything special.
@@Mind_ConTroll I want you to reread my comment and point out where did I even bring credits up and how relevant it is to the particular situation I was talking about.
@@Mind_ConTroll Ai art can't replace human art, it's not replacement nor evolution since it simply does not exist without human artist and does not improve without human artist. Saying offer something better than the AI is dumb as fuck There's nothing the AI cannot learn, the only threat it faces is misinformation and getting fed shit art.
@@Mind_ConTroll except that it's not. These programs just take the original artwork and apply some static to it such as a blur filter. It's been illegal to do this for forever. Taking artwork you don't own and modifying it for non-personal use is fraud. Also, all artists are influenced by others' styles because there are core elements to art such as lines, shadows and composition...this program doesn't do that, it takes the original artwork and then randomizes it in some manner such as a blur filter or deviations in the shading by adding or subtracting values. It is literal forgery and as stated in the video, is being used to defraud artists of their work to benefit the company or individual providing the program. Also, the printing press did not replace scribes, they still exist, in fact, they're everywhere because what used to be uncommon knowledge is now available to 90+ percent of the population instead of what used to be less than 30% (the ability to read and write). The original scribes were so few in number, they were probably just hired by the companies to man the printing press and ensure its accuracy. Also, print never replaced paint. It's still the primary medium for physical artwork. By the way, if you want to go the "if your artwork is so easily reproduced, maybe you were not valuable in the first place?" route, just about EVERY media company in the world would like a word with you about copyright infringement over digital goods, you know, those things that can be reproduced in infinite number? This isn't about adaptation, these companies are literally stealing work and calling it their own. You also fail to realize that AI can only "vary" an artwork for so long before it becomes gibberish. Allowing this to continue causes the entire concept of artwork to become worthless until some undesignated point where everyone realizes that the AI works are so homogenous that there is no real difference between them and no reason to be impressed, especially when a purchase is required. When it comes to human artists, it will literally be one in a million chance that someone has an art style similar to your own if you get passed the basics
As someone who wants to pursue art as a carrier, I am so glad you're putting your voice out there and addressing this issue. It comforts me and gives me hope that maybe it's not all over for my dream future.
Maybe you could do something productive that society values enough to shell out hard earned cash for. Or you could be like the candle-makers and complain about artificial light.
@@CJ-nd9gg your just sad that your bloodline will be the only people to care who you are, meanwhile people who have talent will be remembered for something.
No problem with AI. The problem is with the people using copyrighted work with no permission. This has the same vibe as those people who steal art for youtube thumbnails or profile pictures and then refuse to remove it when requested to do so by the artist, saying that because it's online it's free or some BS.
This is exactly the problem, well said and good analogy. I personally love AI's for their massive potential and how many things it has already accomplished in science but the way it's being used commercially, stealing copyrighted images for art, is appalling and disgusting.
@@SpinoSam In short, people can innovate and add their own creative touch to what they reference, and AI can only take exactly what it has access to and algorithmically put the pieces it was given into a composition
@@expertbean101 Except it's being taught in the same way that a human brain is taught. The newer methods don't copy-and-mix, they understand the parameters, why human brains like whatever is displayed and then it just produces art within its own rules. It only learns the variables the same way an artist that goes to a museum does.
Programmers: ❌Automate routine work so that people concentrate on a carefree life full of entertainment and art. ✅Automate entertainment and art so that people forced to concentrate on boring routine work.
@@furiousmilk6559 Hello, fellow programmer-artist! Yeah, people who stole others's hard work to build up AI are evil. But I do understand that it's part of the future... Dystopian future, because so far it made the life easier for big companies, not middle class people
Automation of art is easier than automation of let's say dish washing. Also, stop calling people evil, just because they made awesome tools which can be used to generate whole movies. You can still draw your own art.
I think it’s insane how artists have to explain the unjustness behind a mass copyright infringement. I think you’re very strong for experiencing this on a mass scale. I know that I and many others like me will always fight for our rights on this issue, as many of us trusted the system with our income to feed our families.
This is the thing, I've been discussing this with a few people who're all pro-AI generation and they all have the same delusion that they are creating something- that they're artists. I've been as polite as I can be to explain how that doesn't make sense, comparing it to claiming you ordered food at a restaurant and claim you made it to even how I take commissions from people. While it's their idea, they ultimately rely on me to create their vision. They disregard this and insist because they are telling the AI what to do, tweaking it, that they are an artist, that artist's referencing is the same thing as the AI being fed art from others. It's remarkable how much these people have fooled themselves into thinking the above, how you can lay out what artists have to study, practice and ultimately use these skills that we've learned to create something- and they will insist that they do the same thing. I saved a convo where a pro-AI guy said "It's like claiming you aren't driving a self driving car when you give it directions" "SELF" driving car- it's in the name! He said these words in defense of AI and I was stunned at how dumb this has gotten.
@@Snotnarok The difference is you're seeing the AI as an entity while others are seeing it as a tool. A tool has no free will, it does nothing without a human operator. That human operator is responsible for the outputs as he has actually done the actions that result in the outputs. If you use an espresso machine, CNC Lathe, 3d Printer, or Fractal Art program you have still created something, even though your input - to some - would be "just changing some settings and pushing a button."
It isn't copyright infringement. Outputs are what matters. As long as the result is different enough you're in the clear. That applies to non-AI art, so it also applies to AI art.
There are multiple layers to the arguments against AI art. 1. It is copyright infringement? do you know the legal definitions of what constitutes copyright infringement? Learning 2 or more styles and blending them together doesn't constitute copyright in fringment in the vast majority of nations. 2. It leads to less human creativity? the same argument was made against the camera when first invented. Like cameras, artists will find ways to use Ai as a tool to improve the field of art.
Sam, I am with you. I am a writer, an independent publisher, and an activist.I will support my fellow creatives in every way I can. I am not on social media, but I am sure my artist friends are. I have sent your video to my four artist friends and asked them to share the video. The struggle continues, but we will prevail.
AI is also scraping writing websites and books now too. (Not that I like it, but it’s also taking fanfiction and I find that hilarious) AI is just taking over every creative thing we have.
@@royalecarmen9837 because it's better. Modern 'artists' are LESS talented than renaissance artists 300 years ago. Art hasn't advanced and now you pay the price
Damn, I came into this video thinking artists are just overreacting and getting upset for nothing. I left in full support and understanding of them. Artists should absolutely be at least compensated for their stolen art, though ideally it shouldn't be stolen in the first place.
@@Kaizerlaser the way ai works is it condenses art into various styles of relating pixels, lines curves etc, so it is 100% about style. google images won't flag what's made with AI unless you directly copy with img2img, which i agree is problematic. i also agree artists should be compensated, but that's in a perfect world. in our current one that won't happen. i'm sure tons of my designs over the years have been scraped, and there's nothing i can do about it. but i'm not going to surrender or go down crying, i'm going to learn the new tech and come out ahead. that's the only thing we can do. photoshop is 100% behind Ai so anyone who isn't is a dinosaur.
@@Bamazon1990 what do you mean?? It's not about the final product, it can look identical to Sams 100% (for example) and nobody would care IF it hadn't use any of his images as dataset. You are not getting the problem. The overall complaint is that It uses others images without their consent to launder data.
A year after this video and I'm currently out of art school looking for a job and the amount of offers is so scarce it's incredibly demotivating. Fuck unethical ai. Copyright ain't a joke
@@culan_SCP cool for you, I'm not saying ai in general is bad my guy, I'm just saying the sourcing of information from ai and the internet in general does not have enough legislations and that big companies are the problem, not ppl using it to get their dnd characters or a visual for their own personal nonprofit project
as an artist I feel quite sad to spend hours making art and getting little recognition... while an AI does better than I do in a few seconds and has much more merit and recognition...
Viewing a great quality piece done in seconds is quite disheartening but remember that there's no time or emotion that's gone into it. That's worth something in and of itself.
When you see a good looking ai image don't think about the machine generating it Think about the nameless artists in the dataset whose hardwork let's the image exist in the first place It's because of artist that this is even possible to begin with
it's more on how you utilize the social network and promoting your artwork now a days, i mean getting more AI in the scene pretty much doesnt change the industry because music, video, games, 3D/2D art scene is already saturated by a lot, also year by year we get new automation tools beyond AI which pretty much we also need to discuss because with such a little effort in skills within half year someone with half year can pretty much draw Anime artwork because of how easy to use drawing tools these days (oh yeah Drawing display only cost 200-400 bucks so enough christmas saving can buy it)... not to mention not good at anatomy? using 3D models you can trace body to what you wanna do... so yeah...
Go to traditional. Easy. I mean, the problem is not AI, the problem is that artists are thinking about the future money problems. So society is the problem (always has been anyway...) I mean just go to traditional. Easy beezi.
@@RainbowGhostOverdriveMany artists are already incredibly underpaid for their work, despite it being a career most studios value. Or hell, it doesn't even have to be for animation productions: look at literally any building, piece of furniture, or logo ever created. You'd assume a machine would CNC the design, right? That design would require the input of people who have knowledge of good color theory, shape language, and visual composition. Who do you think the corporations that need designs for these products should hire to give their company an "identity?" ANY GRAPHIC ARTIST. ANY PRODUCT ARTIST. Artists are responsible for the concept art of products, food, commercial venues, and giving it flair that appeals both to consumers and companies. Replacing those artists with AI robs those companies of design ideas that would otherwise evolve the visual language of their branding for mass appeal. TLDC; pick up a pencil. Pick it up.
When I was young, I was told I had to get “a real job” because artists don’t make any money. After decades of fighting my natural desire to create, I have finally started making art again. I am much happier making art, but I’m sure not making any money. It’s not just young people struggling to find a market for their art! Now when artists put our art out there in order to find a market, we just end up getting our images ripped off by AI. This old lady is mad too!
eh. ai art is already a dying fad that only clickbait articles/vids and companies scummy enough to cheap out on using them use. trust me, as a 20 year veteren pro artist, youre better off with nothing than ANYTHING from them. just keep working, find your unique style, and trust me youll start making a living quicker than you think. its all work work work. cant depend on inspiration or "being in the mood", you gotta practice and put in the time as much as you can all day everyday. learn how to use social media and to sell your art. it probably will never be a glamourous lifestyle but itll be confortable and youll be doing what you love for a living. ❤️❤️❤️
@@aa-tx7th Naive much? You think massive companies like Microsoft and Adobe invest into AI despite apparently being "a dying fad". Be against AI if you want, but at least operate on less ignorant grounds.
what do you think about "artists" who draw stuff? Arent they do the same thing? They watch other art, learn and make their own based on what they saw. Just tool is a pen and it takes a lot of time, comparing to ai prompt. But principal is the same. It just easy to make something "well drawn" with AI But "art" things comes not from visual quality or drawing quality, it comes from idea behind it TO be honest I dont see most hand drawn stuff as art. Its just anime girs os somethings meaningless. It does not evokes anyh feelings, you dont think about what you saw, you glance and moove on. Does it matter its hand drawn or not? It does not have any weight, except hand drawn thins took hours of someones life, It Still can be just a nice pic with no meaning whicn never will touch anyones heart, bring emotion or chellange the mind. Yes, chance that hand drawn thing is more "art" are way bigger because pearson have ideas and commiting hours of time to draw something meaningless less probable, than just making "anime titties superhero in forrest" prompt. But lets be fair, art will be art when its made by artist, not when its made using tool someone think is "right"
Just a personal rant… I was inspired by my family to start a print on demand shop to sell my art and I was actually really excited by it but that was a few years ago now and I haven’t gotten any sales. I watched so many videos of “how to get rich with print on demand” and almost every single one has “tips” on how to use Ai to make quick products. I’m so sick of nobody even seeing my art and all of the work I put into each print and even custom making my own ad posts. I don’t even want to be rich, I just want people to love the pieces they buy from me.
Thank you for enlightening me. I honestly don’t know what disturbs me more that I didn’t know this or that every AI promotion vid I see on UA-cam doesn’t mention artists rights have been utterly violated
I don't mean to be rude, but what promotional video of anything did you see that says about the problems with the product, if you wanna promote something you won't say about something like that
@@paulg6671 You are not rude, just a moron for seeing no issue. I am talking about youtubers; covering content on how amazing this is for art and not drawing attention to what is currently wrong with it is stupid for you as a creator and counterproductive to the problem. People care about their artistic rights being protected for music & this is no different.
@TDogsYard did i say that i agree with them? I just said that i see no reason for them to mention something that is against what they are trying to do, to promote it, i wasn't rude in my opinion, but you could work on your conversation skills, calling someone a moron first thing in the discussion can't be too productive, as you said its counterproductive, you just showed yourself how someone chooses such a method
The absolute worse part about this entire situation is that it is a problem that has such a simple solution which could have stopped all of this from happening, but these corporate companies did what they do best and tried to take loopholes for their benefit. I am absolutely stoked that we live in a world where this technology is accessible to everyone, but the sheer lack of regulation put in place brings the entire reputation of what would otherwise be an incredible tool down. Keep going strong and don’t let the greedy rich people win once more ❤
@@davidsmith-lv4kq Then why didn’t they regulate it themselves to begin with? They take copyrighted material from artists but avoid copyrighted music from musicians. They know artists are too small to push back, whereas the music industry is a power house.
@@Thesamurai1999 they had the ability and just went for it, they must think public display online is fair game similar to exteriors of buildings and public spaces. Who knows how courts will view it? Now that its proven to be valuable they will invest in commissioned / consent models that will be better and better and better. Hopefully the tools available to people are as good as what huge companies have.
Programmer here: It's actually not as easy to filter the images as with music. For music there are multiple databases that contain basically all music. Spotify, Amazon Music, UA-cam music. So it's easy to say don't import from there. With images you kind of have to blindly go into the internet and download what you can get. And it's not about copying specific artists it's about showing the AI millions of images of houses, cars, shoes, trees etc. the more the AI sees of something the better it can recreate it. That's why can it can reproduce famous art so we'll. Because it's seen it thousands of times.
I think saying the AI is taking inspiration by using the images is not wrong. It's actually quite bad at copying exact images and there is nobody who even wants that. If I want a famous images I just download it. I don't need AI for that. I do see your point and understand your feelings. But it's a bit like with the invention of the camera. People thought artists where done for back then but something new was created instead. If you claim you can see the brush strokes of young artists imitating you but you can't see the glaring mistakes AI makes... And if it would create a perfect copy well what's the point? That Image already existed and if I use it THAT would be copyright infringement no matter if it's generated or downloaded.
Ive stopped posting my art on public websites our of fear it will be stolen by these algorithms. There is something so anti human about how people react to these things. Its so sad. Humans are ment to be creative, to write and tell their own stories. Im not against progress but this is how things have been for millions of years. It's how we bond. 😢
( Edit: Thank you so much for all of your kind words in the comments of this comment, Thank you all so much. I wont give up. I just hope that AI art phases away sooner rather than later, or me and many others do not stand a chance. ) ... Im too young to get an art related job, but by the time i can get a job, there will be none for me, because Ai apps wouldve taken them all ive been drawing for my ENTIRE life, and its the only thing that i am capable of setting my mind to. Artists are geting their art stolen, and others have been put out of a job Im devastated, because the only thing i can do well is being done better by a computer via theft, and people are loving it. I cant express how upset i am.
i feel that, man. im in the same situation and honestly it scares and upsets me so much that the only freaking thing i want to do with my life i might not be able to do. its just awful.
I feel the same. Feels like we're all living the age of dystopian cyber fantasy except it's happening now. I'm honestly anxious but I don't really want to give up on it.
the first part isn't a valid reason to hate AI art. i despise how they use copyrighted material in the dataset, but the AI itself is only a tool and it's inevitable. it's simply progress. heck i'm a programmer and AIs are getting *really* good at my job too but i'm glad about it. i think of it as what a sewing machine would be for seamstresses. people will probably lose jobs because of it (maybe even me), but it's a necessary step
I use Pinterest all the time for references and just save any art I like, but recently I've been clicking on a LOT pieces, thinking it looks nice and wanting the credits, just to see someone who says it's 'ai' and gives pretty obvious proof I wouldn't have noticed before. It's flooded everywhere on my homepage, and it just makes me furious at ai!
So when the artist taking others artists artworks and create in the same style somme realy similar art it is not stealing it is ok ? but when AI creates similar artwork it is stealing ? I definitely understand when AI is making olmoste 1 to 1 work and the persone use it to make money from it , yea it is stealing but if it is not 1 to 1 or olmoste 1 to 1 it is not stealing. SO the problem would by solwed if AI generators would hawe the program that can chek in the % how generated work is diferent in ewery whay from already existig images in database and let to take only if it less then 50% similarity otherwise it would be illegal to use it in commercial ways
@@bobans Fundamentaly different ? are u shure ? are we talking abouth the samme media DIGITAL ART ?, couse i know u can just coppy paste someones art and it is 100% samme , u can take someones art and just paint a bit on top, change somme details and at the end it is the samme shit - stealing , so the real problem is not the using someones art without asking or feading AI with it for learning purposes ,couse ewery art online can be taken for learning purposes without using it to make money or geting agreement, it is abouth the end product it is copy paste or olmoste copy paste, works made with AI or with human hands it is the samme shit stealing if finished result is broking the red lines, so the real problem is not agreeing with the red lines on how much similarity is ok in % finished art to become yours to use ( no mather what is made people or AI) . SO the best way to solw a problem would be regulation if all AI generators would hawe program that shows % similarity to original art works in the generated images and do not leting use those images if similaryti is more then 50% or it can be 30 - 20% range
I'm a professional artist, even though I don't post much online. This whole AI debacle has made me incredibly depressed, but at the same time I started to feel immense comradery with other artists, even those much, much bigger than me.
I don’t really have anything else to say that hasn’t already been said, so I’m just commenting on this video for the algorithm because more people need to see this and educate themselves.
How do you even know if someone drew an image with your style? how do you know if it was AI or person? What if I draw your art by hand and put years into it and then upload my art of your style into AI and then generate more of them you will claim copyright for them? when I made my art with your style and allowed it to be used in AI? Wake up
@@w2lf That is if you actually put years into it. Artist's look up with each other all the time and on years of practicing most of them eventually grow out and develop their own style taking inspiration. Of course if you at least do and know art seriously you would know how this works. I suggest you look more into this issue because you're basing on ifs without knowing more about why artist's are really against ai.
Excuse my ignorance ... but isn't the title 'Ai artist' an oxymoron? I am a musician/singer/songwriter - so maybe I don't understand the new visual art artist fully... but if a person puts a prompt in and Ai creates the design... how can one call himself an artist? Especially if they are STEALING someone else's ideas and style????
*Especially if they are STEALING someone else's ideas and style????* Literally not a thing - ideas on their own are broad building blocks, generally things too broad to be owned, and things that can be owned are formed from multiple "ideas," and thus aren't a raw "idea" itself, and a "style" can identify an artist, but nobody can own a style in any sense of the word.
I don't call myself an artist and only play around with AI for fun, and do not post my work anywhere. But I've spent hours on a single idea trying to get the image close to what I want it to look like. I have a specific process that is more than just "enter prompt, get image, done." And the images that I have deemed finished genuinely move me emotionally. Am I not creating art?
I hate how all these people who use AI call themselves 'artists', when they have created nothing. Then they get mad at actual skilled creators who voice their displeasure with their work literally being stolen.
I'm convinced a lot of the people so desperate to shut artists up are the same ones who aren't artists. Obviously that's a general assumption, but I am truly convinced these people are just obsessed they got a new toy and are afraid the big bad artists are demanding even a fragment of something resembling respect or empathy.
I’m not an artist or digital artist but… I do not support AI art. I understand and respect the time, blood, sweat and tears that artists have put in to their art.
You're exactly right. They couldn't create anything on their own because they're not artists. But they actually believe they create something when they use AI. If someone then lifted their AI "creation" they'd be furious.
I very much agree, though I would hate to generalize. If AI users can at least show some empathy and honest respect for non-AI users, then at least they don't have a problematic ego. The real problem for now are those companies only promising opt-out features, when they should already be OPT-IN. Once that is dealt with, we could settle on how users could ethically use the models. Though the best course of action would be to completely remove and remake the models from scratch. Either that or let the companies go bankrupt from having to pay-up for every original piece of data they collected without consent. (UPDATE) Looking back at this comment, I've realized that even using AI ethically still would not solve the bigger issues around its influence and how there would always be people using it to exploit/replace others instead of empowering us to have better lives [quite a subjective proposition]...because of the way society uses its resources for PROFIT above everything else, making many people cynical of technological advances even if they could benefit us. We're used to this, so if something seems revolutionary, it's only natural we would be skeptical of the people behind it.
i agree I have used AI but for ideas for my next OC or next illustration and it seems like people are just making fun of our community like its a waste of time.
I think a pivotal issue with the fight against AI is how undereducated most people are on copyright issues. Many people aren't aware of how important copyright is and how important that artist's works are their intellectual property that is supposed to be protected by law. I think more people should learn about it.
And while learning about copyright, make sure you learn about fair use and transformative work and why AI isn't theft even if you really wish it was. :) Making transformative work illegal will severely backfire on millions of artists and youtubers who literally rely on "stealing" other people's work. They just never see it at theft because it wasn't theft, up until now apparently. Now artists are desperately trying to kill fair use and artistic freedom out of some bizarre and misplaced anger.
@@vulcanh254 Your jealousy is really pathetic. You'll never be able to make anything of real value and instead of writing gleeful comments with misplaced arrogance, you could have picked up a pencil and started studying how to draw. But you never will, because it was just too hard for you.
@@vulcanh254 Do you know how fair use works? Do you know what the 4 points of evaluation of fair use in the US are? I invite you to actually read through it before you spew nonsense about fair use. Because then you would actually see how, despite it being transformative, AI models break all 4 points of fair use.
You silly artist who feel attacked with some form of software, you should care about why the elite promote and finance an agenda that makes it possible to automate everything and desolve artists, writers and all other forms of AI that is created by big tech.. there you find the real problem of you complains, not people who make use of something that is promoted by big tech companies. If you are a good artists you never can be replaced by some software.. only mediocre artist will feel compromised by it. Its just another toy for now, but it has a darker kind of agenda called Transhumanism.
@@59Magma I noticed you fail to provide any actual argument. If you did make an argument I would easily obliterate it and school you with hundreds of legal cases setting fair use and transformative work precedents. So pretty wise from you to avoid a debate you can't win. :) You didn't even argue your own point because you know it's nonsense and you can't actually prove it to me without making yourself look ignorant. So you just went with "nuhuh". Classic.
The fact that just today an artists got laid off and replaced with AI and in the email they said “we will continue to take inspiration from your art” sums this situation up perfectly. They basically said “oh thank you for providing us with your work for years, we are now going to unethically feed it to a machine which you didn’t consent too so we can cut you out of our bottom line”
To me, this is the real worry. If you try to remove all "copyright work" from future stable diffusion models in order to make it worse... you just set up corporations to have the only decent models. Everyone wants it removed, but it's not going to help you with employment. What it will do is make it so you have to pay another company to use their good model. Basically turning it into a pay to win system.
@@randfall so there's no point? Is that what you mean? I'm freaking out about this, its killing a part of human nature, reinforcing the, if you aren't great at something you shouldn't do it mentality. Singing, making art, dance! These are Al things people nowadays are too embarrassed to do because they're not naturally great. Fuck that shrak
@@randfall Then what needs to happen is that artists from all walks need to band together, and build their own economy to fund and work their own projects. *We don't need these companies.* We have our own ideas.
Hi, I’m a 14 year old artist and I have free for the future of art. I do love this video and I have always been inspired by you, I don’t know what I would do without the job of being an artist. Art has always been the thing I love and am best at, I love art and don’t want AI to take over artists jobs. What I’m trying to say through this comment is thank you Sam, for looking out for young artists like me.
Really glad to see ur comment my acc is dead whatever i do to grow it and now nft and ai is making me feel helpless more and more glad there still ppl support the artist
Tell that to places like FurAffinity who bans the most hard-working artists and accuses them of AI. I dislike AI too and hope it goes away but just accusing people is scummy.
@@ayanari3531The easiest way to find out if an artist is using AI is to check the date they started uploading. If they suddenly appeared out of nowhere in late 2022 to early 2023 and started posting tons of images almost every day, 99% chance it's all AI trash.
I just couldn't understand the appeal of AI, the reason why I love real art created by artists is that someone is so talented to execute such a wonderful image and have patience to do it.
I would say the opposite. People who love AI art love art and love ai art because it gives them a chance to create something they may not normally be able to. Sure someone can study and do art for years and thats wonderful, but a lot of people would love to create art but dont have the time. Usally my saying gose if everyone were kings we'd have no bread But it holds true for this too. If everyone were artist we'd have no bread. But that dosent mean the bread maker wouldn't like to express themselfs through art if given a chance. AI art is that chance for many
@@TerryAVanguard That's kind of the problem though, people who use Ai art aren't actually creating anything. You may get results that are unconventional, but it's not aesthetic material that has artistic intent or invokes a specific kind of meaning. Creating art is a process that involves making consecutive choices and decisions, which is not really something you are doing when typing in a series of prompts. Even discussions involving "style" is often misunderstood as an aesthetic appeal, when in reality we are talking about the visual representation of someone's artistic experience and knowledge. No one has to be good at art to be an artist, but you at least have to do the work to be an artist. Ai art is antithetical to this idea, since all you are doing is feeding other people's work into an algorithm. The promise of Ai art democratizing creativity seems like a trojan horse to me. The prospect of ai generated art is promising at first until, like everyone's personal information, people's art work is fed into the corporate machine, which generally answers to no one. This will stratify class issues even further as artists become displaced, and make start of entry even more difficult for new professional artists. The reality is that ai art enthusiasts are asking us for permission to automate the human soul. It's not the idea of it existing that's the problem, it's the economic system that it's built under that is the problem, which brings me back to my initial (arguably unproductive) comment. Like with everything in our capitalist economic system, the people this will benefit the most are people who do not actually like art. The willingness for people to exploit the work of existing artists this early on, and the overall lack of respect around such issues by ai enthusiasts already establishes very obvious ethical issues involved with the technology.
To be fair, as an artist, I don’t even call it “AI Art” because the generated images just look dead inside, since it is literally not made by a person. I doubt that people who actually appreciate art and the message behind it will just replace us with a robot. Don’t give up yet, fellow artists out here 🫶
The problem with being an artist is that people always tell them they are useless parasites until the work they suddenly fall in love with is created. Once the work is created, it gets exploited by the same people without any regard for the artist..
Im a student studying to be an AI architect and software engineer. Fun fact: did you know AI art isn't actually new? Earliest versions were made in the 60s. The inventor was a former painter too. He made it to help those who struggle with creativity. I honestly don't struggle with being creative. So I don't use gen AI art stuff. I use Google Gemini only. But I do wanna help. How are these ideas for AI art use? #1: Use it to make things for yourself and get inspiration. #2: this is for publishing cases. publish it and cite the AI tool and put your name as the prompt user. An artist could also use things like chatGPT for ideas. But it cannot be used to replace. Anyone got more ideas?
I was totally gun ho about Midjourney before I watched this video. As someone who has always appreciated real life artists and writers before all of this A.I. nonsense, I'm ashamed at how easy it was for me to get swept in defending it against real artists. Makes me a little sad, and confused to be honest. Thank you so much for this eye-opening video!
People who do this to ‘get rid of the middle man’ don’t care about art. They don’t like art. They never have. They like pretty pictures. They like getting compliments for clicking a button. They like getting money for clicking a button. People like that are beneath art. I don’t think they’ll ever understand what art can actually be.
To those who support AI art. Imagine AI copy your persona and replace u. Then when u start arguing about it, they just say "u was free online, and they didn't need ur agreement"
Is it too late to cease Ai? Will everyone be laid off by Ai? Will Ai jobloss be the new normal? Swell robots doing everything. All so we can obey an Ai new world order?
You think I'd care? I'd honestly be flattered (and somewhat confused) that a hyper-logical AI would consider my autistic trainwreck @$$ worthy of being imitated.
I also think a lot of people out there have _no idea_ just how hard it is to learn to draw well or how long art takes. They think it's a skill or a talent that some people have. They don't understand all the technical knowledge involved.
Same as any other thing. It is about what meant for you! EVEREYONE is capable to anything as long as it is meant for THEM! But that is just the motivation! NOBODY can skip hard work! that is what makes things precious! Something that worth fighting for! Also it is VERY personal! For an example art is therapy to me! The whole journey of getting better in art helped me to think about a lot of things/clear my head while i did the art pieces. It helped me to appreciate myself and the steps i have made does not matter how big or "small" they were. This is a VERY important experience and people who do not appreciate it simply does not understand it/does not deserve it.
You're not special. You have fallen victim to that one human weakness of overestimating yourself. I can draw too, very well actually, realistic portraits, etc. but that doesn't mean anything to anyone except to me. Me, personally I love tech advancements, and people are just whining for no reaso. They want us to go back to the stone age. If AI art can replicate a certain style (styles aren't copyrighted), and people want to generate those images for their consumption, how is that a problem to you or me? A couple pennies less in your pocket? Well maybe find a better way to make art, or make your art better than AI art.
@@MA-ck4wu the point is less about style but more about using imagies they don't own and use without permission to get that AI working. Without those images the AI would be useless...
@@charlie7694 That's trivial, because it would be like asking real artists not to be inspired by all the millionso of art works already out there. Even if you removed modern art works (which are publically viewable for free anyway, mind you) they could still use all of the millions of paintings in the public domain (Rembrandt, Michelangelo etc.) It's like you're asking the AI not to be inspired by the real world, but by nothing, and as you know, you can't turn nothing into something.
@@MA-ck4wu You can't just "get better" in a flash. It takes YEARS and DECADES to get our art to the standards people consider "good." The AI art not only steals the work that has taken people hours to finish and decades to perfect, its free, only takes minutes, and a lot cheaper than commissioning an artist to make a piece by hand. THAT in itself is robbing an artist of their career and discouraging younger, less skilled artists who have poured their heart and soul into their pieces only for people to turn up their noses in favor of AI, leaving the artist to find another career in an abrupt turn of events that they may have not planned for their future. In short: If this continues AI can rob people of passions and futures, not just money.
@@i34g5jj5ssx Aİ cant draw. İt steals. Just try prompts like bunny with dog theets and cat ear, he can't do it because no one do that. But human can do that, there is the difference of stealing and inspring
The lack of empathy is sad but not surprising. Internet is overall less empathetic than IRL, easier to be cruel to someone we don't know (which was always easy, see human history of wars) when we also don't have to see them. But I think it comes from hidden envy. Non-artists always envied people who can create (they don't envy the low average pay though). And now they get some sort of sick payback, so they can barely hide their excitement. I've even seen comments like that, where they said the quiet part loud. "Finally those cocky artists get what they deserve" or something like that. That's the underlying motive for many "Stop crying" types I think. They think artists consider themselves "better than the rest of us" and now they get some kind of sick payback. And it's clear why there is a double standard music vs. arts. Record labels hold all the rights, they have an army of lawyers. Art copyright is owned usually by individual artist, who can't afford lawyers. They prey on the weak.
You have it exactly backwards. Everyone has empathy for artists -- it's when artists started wanting special rights and wanting to be treated as more special than everyone else that you get the cruel comments. Nobody likes to see arrogant a-holes arguing that something is being stolen from them, when absolutely nothing has been stolen, any more than humans learning from other artists are "stealing" their art. When artists want to stop progress, and artists want to stop other people getting tools that make them more creative, then yeah, artists are going to get massive pushback. Just like when artists wanted to ban photography in the 19th century because it was going to hurt the portrait artist business (which it did, of course). If artists want sympathy, then the ignorant ones should educate themselves on how this works, and the lying ones should stop lying that something is being stolen. My sympathy doesn't extend to people who want to slow down progress and prevent people from using these new tools. More creativity in the world is a good thing.
Equally, the elitism and clear greed pouring in from the pro-artist side has opened my eyes as to why you should, under no circumstances, be ever respected.
@@cuthbertallgood7781 did you listen to his point on the difference between ai training via reference and humans training via reference? What is your thoughts on it?
@@thatoneperson689 He's completely ignorant of how things work. He literally says the AI can create a perfect replica, and it can't, except in some extremely rare cases where some image was overtrained because there are so many copies of it around (and you actually try and make it reproduce that overtrained image). But that's the problem -- he doesn't understand it and he's absolutely DEAD WRONG about his rights. He has copy rights, no more, no less. I can do ANYTHING I want with his art, except sell exact copies of it. If nothing is being produced that resembles his art compositions, then obviously nothing has been stolen, because that's ALL he owns -- the works he's produced, not his own style.
@@cuthbertallgood7781 Do you even know the time it takes to create art? And no, you can't do anything you want. For example, you can't say an art piece that isn't yours, is. That's stealing. "Special treatment" wtf?? Because we don't want the creations, we put so much time into, for little to no pay, to be "recreated" by an AI? You must be f*cking with me right now.
hell, it's just so disgusting. When I see young artists still drawing and learning - I'm so glad that there are young generations who know what art is about -_-
I'm 18, and I was thinking about pursuing a fine art career, this just makes me sad tbh. Art is a way of self expression, and to see how millions of works get stolen without consent to create something that is not even original just breaks my heart. I've been drawing throughout my entire life and I can't imagine myself dedicating my time and passion to another career, I really hope this issue gets solved quickly. I will fight to have a future in this industry, please don't take art away from us.
Keep going and fighting buddy. I’m 16 and I hope in some capacity I can get an art related job. But honestly, ‘Ai art’ as a whole has just made me feel a bit sad too. I think the best thing we can do collectively as aspiring artists is keep working and having fun with our art now and try to keep hope about the future as artists. Hang in there mate.
Ai art cant tweak specific things, they cant do a full turn around of a character , of complex armor, it cant change one minor thing without fucking up the rest entirely, and it can not and will never replace a human being in companies. Several art directors and hiring managers for game companies have strictly stated "we will not hire you if you use ai, and its a quick way to end your career before you even start it". Im pretty sure it was a director from Riot games on twitter. You wont be replaced, and if you are it wont be by a company worth jack shit. Keep making art, YOU ARE NOT REPLACEABLE!
I feel like the audience for AI art is much different than that of the art industry. AI art can help generate ideas(rather poorly, however, since the ideas are always based on existing artwork and are almost never original), but it's far from learning the creative process that art directors and hiring managers are looking for. It's definitely sad that AI can learn art fundamentals that take years to learn, but I don't think it really competes with humans in the industry. That's just my take after absolutely 0 research, but... Don't give up!
I have cancelled my sub to Midjourney. For a while it was amazing seeing what the AI would create from words. For those of us who are not artists, it was a wonderful experience - and helped me tremendously with my issues. But knowing it has been at the expense of actual artists who did not opt into this, makes me really sad. Thank you for explaining that there is no opt out or opt in. Most of the public are unaware that these styles have been stolen. I do hope your message is heard by many people and that they value the effort creating art requires.
Honestly, if you only used art that you had permission to feed the AI, if you weren't trying to monetize it without permission, and if you gave credit to the artists whose art and styles were used in the event that you did post something.. Just like with fan art, it could be done in a way that actually helps the real artists instead of hurting them. I would actually be supportive of some creative AI projects by people if they made sure to have permission and give credit. Like, it was messed up to make an AI off of Kim Jung Gi's work after he passed with no consent...But, maybe a living artist like him could consent to a graphic novel or something using their style with AI? It could have been good for everybody and a means to more creative collaboration... If only.
@@KaterynaM_UA I agree. I do think if they had gone the route of asking permission, and giving credit, they might have been surprised how many artists might have been willing to give their work to the AI, and even collaborate if it wasn't designed to cut the artists out of the process and pretend they don't exist.. As it is right now none of it had permission so you are right it just feels bad.
I think it’s just a kick in the balls. If you spent a dozen hours painting a piece, and maybe thousands of hours gathering the necessary skills to paint it. Then you share it to the world, and that piece that took years of progress and hard work to create is essentially and directly used to replace you and the skills you’ve painstakingly gathered. I think people need to try and apply this to their own fields or passions, it’s not hard to see why we are upset.
If your work is valuable then you will not be replaced. Extend your skills to formats that AI can't reproduce yet. Blender, 3D game art and everything that needs a specific format to work in a computer program. It was always a bad idea to only produce jpg-s and png-s, that is simply reproducable by computers easily now. I'm a programmer and ChatGPT writes codes better than me, however it can't work with large code base so it will not replace me (yet). You need to put specific art into a big project that AI can't reproduce.
I never imagined we artists -- and creativity itself -- would become obsolete. Society is becoming as soulless and devoid of individuality as the corporate world. I'm not surprised that the people stealing our art don't understand the creative process: They don't use it.
ai doesn't steal art any more than a person who goes to an expressionist art gallery 'steals' the art there when he paints an expressionist piece in the same style. artists just want to all feel unique and special
@@haroldgarrett2932imagine comparing a machine to a human. The problem isn't when you copy someone's work using AI or not, it's when you pass it off as your own. If you try to copy someone's work, very likely it won't be perfect and will take you a long time to actually make it. But an AI can literally copy everything perfectly all in a matter of minutes and even seconds and at that point it's almost impossible to differentiate the original and the copy.
@@haroldgarrett2932ai does still art in a way, because ai takes works from multiple artist (without their permission) and meshe them together to create "art"
DEFINITELY! 💪 Also not speaking up once, but continue speaking up or at least supporting/sharing/etc others who are raising their voice too. Together we can create change!
@Snowyamur9889 No. We need these AI bros to stomp on some serious top big dogs toes that have enough financial power to move legally against them, forcing a better regulation ( and creating a lagel precedent) like it happened for music. The artistic communities have been rising up in so many platforms and manners, but because we don't have that power house behind ( yet) the AI bros ( and slaves that are helping feeding it) will continue as normal. Sadly.
I'm a year 2 animation student, and our courses talked a lot about this issue for a while now. one of our lecture guest actually gave a pretty good point which is art ultimately comes from creativity, which is hard for AI the replicate, thus I believe that although current what these companies are doing is unethical, illegal and simply unacceptable, Artists, don't be hopeless, lets keep doing our best work and we will prevail. And even if one day nobody is taking this issue seriously, we will stand together and fight for our art.
Is creativity the idea not the execution though? True there are astonishingly banal ways of using AI to generate art. Within a few years it's going to be part of everyone's workflow if you work digitally. There were purists who screamed about using PhotoShop years ago, and if you are using the neural features on that now, congrats you're using A.I. When photography became in reach of most people, art went abstract. AI allowing bespoke concepts to be created by non-artists is going to change things. Is art about ideas, or is it purely a technical flex?
@@electricwhiteboy you're completely missing the point. Artists know that AI is here to stay. It's the unethical practice of taking artist's work to train these AI without any due recompense to the artists. How hard is this to understand? It's like you can't even take a moment to see the artist's point of view on this. AI is cool. We all agree that AI is powerful and is here to stay. That doesn't mean that it should be OK to rip off artist's work free of charge to make the AI amazing at art.
@@madshader Did you invent the elements of style? It's like asking for a cut for another artist using your work as a reference to create something new. My work has been used obliquely to create something else. PAY ME! Cut up, collages, repurposing, WHERE'S MY MONEY BITCH!
@@electricwhiteboy well creativity actually means a lot more than execution, I suspect you're thinking about the visuals, and yeah AI without effort can easily beat us in terms of speed and aesthetic. What I meant by creativity leans more to story, for instance making a joke out of something or telling a story with visuals where everything from the atmosphere to details of objects or even posture and expression of characters matters, these things AI still struggles at this age, and we can still do what we do. As for the point of unethical practice of AI, there's no denying that it is simply true, and we should put a stop to it. I simply believe that it's not completely hopeless for artists simply because AI will exists.
I am an regular users and one thing I don’t like about the use of AI is flooding the search results of google or social media with slop, the vibe of browsing on steam in a sea of asset flips.
As a kid who really want to be an artist and wish to make an amazing arts like yours. I was feeling hopeless, but after hearing you.... You are giving me hope to younger generation like me. Thank you, Mr.Sam.
Same! When I saw how much better AI was at art, even me with a talent for art, I can't keep up... I literally cried and thought I was gonna be useless xd (Sorry my english is not the best)
@@RoadWorkAhead.YeahIHopeItDoes Instead of going along with the mob that's feeding you lies and nonsense to keep you angry and depressed maybe actually ask the professional artists and photographers who integrated the A.I into their workflow how they did it and I'm certain most of them wouldn't t mind giving you all the information you need to start. Oh, and one important thing Sam probably ignored to mention is that the A.I models by SD are completely free to download and use and are open source as well.
@@AscendantStoic speaking of feeding lies, you're doing a great job. Chop chop, go back to the cubicle, you're due to some more hours in training the AI. Free of charge, of course. Why paying for a willing SLAVE?
@@RejectedInch lols, is there an emotional blackmail low you wouldn't stoop to in order to justify your blind hatred of something you clearly have no understanding of, I guess not.
How do you even know if someone drew an image with your style? how do you know if it was AI or person? What if I draw your art by hand and put years into it and then upload my art of your style into AI and then generate more of them you will claim copyright for them? when I made my art with your style and allowed it to be used in AI? Wake up
@@w2lfwhen you’ve spent over a decade learning art and finding your style, I’m pretty sure you’d know how to detect it. Trust me, even the untrained eye will always find something wrong with AI when compared to the original.
@@w2lf styles CANNOT be copyrighted, which is why this whole ai outrage is pointless. The only thing that breaks copyright is if an image is exactly the same as someone elses but ai doesnt copy, it generates new images.
This whole mess happened a week after declaring myself as an Illustration major. I’ve cried way too many times to count. I’m thankful that you spoke up. Artists need to speak about this. They need to hear us roar.
your not wrong. i get this. machines out compete me, i work 12 hour days, 7 days a week, even on christmas. and im lucky if i get paid min wage for 40 of thoise hours each week. but I have to keep in mind, I couldnt afford most of my work. I cant be made that people who are poor like myself pay corperations to utilize machines.
Your roar will mean nothing sadly. Remember our world is money ran. If a decision can be made to increase profits and lower operating costs, the artist will be thrown away in favor of ai art which can produce vast amounts of art a business, individual, company, streamer, etc need in minutes compared to an artist can in a day.
@@eegernades Nah, you're just a loser talking loser nonsense. There's no reason why artists should just give up and accept that their artwork is stolen and used to make money without being compensated. Facebook was just given the largest fine in history and banned from doing something they shouldn't have done. If artists go together in a class action-type lawsuit then they could get the rules clarified. No reason to give up like a loser.
@@anderslarsen4412 I'm a realist, not a loser. You're forgetting, the ai evolves. It won't need any human references in a year at this speed. Artist copyright will mean nothing in that instance. The largest fine in history for a company like Facebook means nothing. It's just the cost of doing business as they make more than that a quarter even with losing money to meta endeavors and losing users. Artist can get together, but won't mean a thing if the money keeps coming. A artist strike would be useless, a artist get together will be useless once the ai no longer needs an artist reference, which some like novel ai and chatgp are no longer needing. Imagine one more year.
@@eegernades The thing is that if artists don't give permission to train the AI with their work, then the AI can't replicate their art/art-style since it needs their images to do that. This is what Sam and the majority of artists are saying, artists are not against the AI itself, but against AI using their artwork without permission. I have a feeling many artists will not want to give permission to their work since they don't want their work/art-style to be replicated/copied. I think that if the AI program would only use and be trained on payed stock images and/or get the artists permission it should be fine. It would be fair and legal/not in any grey area.
I completely understand how artists who spend years honing their skills can feel frustrated with their work being appropriated by big-tech in such way, and yes, young artists might be feeling utter hopeless right now. It all feels quite unsavoury. That being said, nothing can stop the wheel of technological progress, and this is a typical case where people are going to have to adapt to this new reality.
there's a big difference between labor jobs being taken by machines and generative jobs like writing, drawing and composing. You by saying this are actively supporting the bulldozing of the entire art and creative industry.
@@Lambsauce10is there really? both are often done for peoples comfort and entertainment. If you can automate something that brings people happiness make it take less work to produce then whats the problem with that? People throughout history have lost jobs to automation, it kinda just tends to happen, however these automations bring about good things long term.
I want to add my two cents when it comes to the whole "inspiration" thing. Artists don't JUST get inspired from other artists and their works, theres more to it. Artists can get inspired by many things, such as music, fashion, video games, movies, aesthetics, cultures, etc. And every artist has their own unique combination of all these different things that pulls from their personality. I think this is something that quite a few people aren't aware of.
I don’t really have anything else to say that hasn’t already been said, so I’m just commenting on this video for the algorithm because more people need to see this and educate themselves. Ps I’ve been posting this same comment so many times I’m pretty sure at least one person thinks I’m a bot. 😅
Yes, sure. But as a concept artist myself, I do get inspired by other people's works. I think the issue starts when a person directly copies another's work. Styles aren't coyrighted, and never have been. AI takes everything. Photos, graphics, drawings, paintings. It will in the future use music and other media, I am sure. Some are being adapted to use video. This is not going to stop. Art will not be the one field affected (there is already fairly good AI that can code, for example). Whether or not we like it, AI is here to stay. The cat is out of the box, people are free to train their own models and they have been. It is what it is, it's not going back. There's not putting Stable Diffusion away. Companies which don't leverage this tech will be out competed by the ones that do.
These programmers don't get us artists. They have ego basically. They think they understand what's it like to be one because they made a piece of code that generates art by analysing every single artwork on the internet, pretending it's not stealing. If only it was the other way around. Maybe then they would get it.
Most people understand why artists are hurting however it's not and ego thing, Im willing to die on the hill of AI, I still remember that old attitude from certain artists that was essentially "I can't be replaced", Ai makes things way more cost effective, not to mention inspiration, really as an argument, you understand the ai has the ability to not only use art but anything and everything we want to feed it for inspiration and it can take all of that into account instantly rather then "human touch" and it's many happy little accidents and one more with due time it'll be so advanced that waiting will be a thing of the past, I'm sure the market for a real artist will still be there but like everything else where people have been replaced, adapt, improvise and overcome, basically learn to live with it and find ways for it to help you or fall to way side. Your ultimatum, the only that has surprised me about it all is, how did some of the most creatives on earth get replaced before say putting stuff on a shelf
The ai itself doesn’t even get me that upset but the ai defenders that KNOW and understand how it works, make my blood boil because of their insensitivity towards artists…. “Keep crying” i will because this is my dream and an entire industry of people who spend hours getting there! Learning about ai and how people disrespect visual arts like this made me scared of even pursuing a creative career at all.
I'm just a hobbyist, but the implications of mass data laundering are dawning on me and it's really scary Do your best not to let idiots on the internet get you down, that's what it's there for, and if someone hasn't put 1000 hours of blood sweat and tears into art they will never understand what it means to have it stolen from you - we've seen this pattern of people only caring when their neck is on the line before and we'll see if again Even if this whole thing goes south there WILL still be a place for visual arts in the world though, it'll just be a bit more complicated. Don't lose hope, we will need people like you (and there are enough of us that the ai issue will not be a quiet affair regardless)
They know creation is literally the only one things that is worth in this world. You can feel the envy these people have of artists, they even call themselves artists when they make AI ""art"" which is quite the opposite of art.
These people seem like they're either trolls or morons. Human made art is the egg from which AI made art is hatched from. Humans have invented art styles and without human artists to keep innovating art and creating new visual aesthetics - the AI will just keep repeating the same existing styles. Imagine if people were so weak willed that whenever someone put us down online we'd just give up. Imagine if all of the artists would just decide to stop making art or to stop sharing it online. That would instantly kill the progress of AI art generators. These people who claim to be in favor of the advancement of technology are trying to burn the fuel which feeds their machine.
I feel like most of the hostility is a reaction to the perceived hostility of artists towards non-artists. No one likes being called a thief using publicly available images to create something new. They are aware they didn't manually put in the time and effort to get the result, but often feel that the images are inspired by their imagination. I'd say its more similar to commissioning an "artist" for a piece in the style of a different artist. In the art community it could be seen as taboo if the work is publicized, but if the only person who requested the commission receives it's less so. Redistribution and monetization is the only reason I'd see there being a reason for conflict, otherwise I haven't really yet to see a reason why coexistence wouldn't be possible for creators and people who use these tools for personal use.
Honestly, you said it just right: "There is no empathy, there is no understanding." The problem stem from something that is a lot more ingrained into the mindset of people, and has started way before AI. This idea that art on the internet is just out for grab. The absolute lack of respect for someone else work. It was there before, with art thieves, and tracers, and using art without credits. AI is just the culmination of that mindset, and does a lot more damage. All the AI bootlickers are just the exemple of that mindset. They're just entitled brats, who throw a tantrum when told to respect someone else.
I agree with ya.. Oh, the last part, LOUDER ! Sometimes I wanna be a real ghost so I could possess or live inside of one of those people, just to see/watch what is up with that mentality.. I lost some of mon précieux brain cells arguing with art thieves ~
For too long artists and nice people have been told to always take the higher road. Personally I'm sick of that malarkey, if these f*ckers wanna get down in the mud then I'll get right in there with them. I'm done playing nice
Or humans are the ones trying to cling on to what makes them special. We are all going to be out of a job soon. Not just artists. If it's about respect the pandora's box of disrespect has been opened. Although I sympathize with artists, it's just going to be a tough battle.
First: It cannot be directly said that AI companies are making illegal commercial use of works, because in reality, copyright law does not prohibit analyzing the patterns of an image with a computer, so that is not illegal use. It could become illegal if determined as such in the future, but that leads to: Second: Even if it were declared illegal to study the patterns of an image with a computer without authorization, nothing prevents the company from hiring a handful of people to create works to feed the AI, many in styles as similar as possible to the artists who do not want to lend their works for training. In the end, it will be the same.
I'm not an artist, but as a content creator myself, I understand how you guys feel. The fact that you guys put your heart and soul into these projects, only to have it be taken away is completely unfair. You artists deserve better.
I am an artist, and it's not like I have no sympathy for people of my kind, but I do think that the whole art stealing thing is laughable. Those who claim that ai is taking away their passions or something are unreasonable. Ai doesn't stop me from creating whatever I want and whenever I want. Another point: "Ai steals the art of others to generate images, without shouting out sources of inspiration". Yes, like human artists do. You may shout out the work of art you were inspired by, but there are things that inspire you unconsciously. You may see the shape of a building and place it in the back of your memory, so that when drawing you can return to it without even noticing. The same way you learn to draw anything. I've learnt to draw things not only by observing them, I also observed works of other artists and acknowledged their ways of solving the problems I was facing. I can't shout-out every single thing I saw in my life, that shaped my world image. And what if I will copy the style of other artist? What if I will make money off of it? If I am drawing as good as Leonardo Da Vinci did, but copy his style entirely isn't my income deserved? At the end of the day, he received his fame and fortune because of the beauty of his art, and my art might be just as stunning as his. If I deliver the same product for a cheaper price and take away someone's audience, what is so wrong about it? If I am inspired by someone's art there is nothing but my generous initiative that obliges me to shout-out the artist. The other idea is that ai is taking over people's jobs and therefore it is bad. Well that isn't a question of moral is it? If there is an artist better than me, taking away my clients it is in my interest to change my specialty or best myself in order to win the competition. I certainly wouldn't go out and protest against the skillful artist just because his efficiency hinders me. And though ai doesn't have feelings and imposing sanctions against it doesn't not hurt it, there are consumers, that would've received their product cheaper, faster and in a better quality only if you didn't show up with your selfish demands. For the same reason we might've not invented cars, since the coachmen would've lost their source of income. Every human invention was made for making our lifes easier, with every new technology there is one human job less. If ai will fully take over the arts the consequences will be the same, as those of industrialization. Many will loose their jobs, many will adapt, the lifes of many will become easier. This is just a part of human progress.
Funny sht is that the AI is trained by taking inspiration from other people's art, but most of the artists do the same thing. They open images that look similair to what they are trying to make and imitate it or even copy it to a certain degree. While i understand the feelings of uncertainty and being scared for your own profession, this is technological progress that you are seeing. The indrustrial age has replaced a lot of jobs as well and people were protesting against it. In the end everyone just accepted it. In the upcomming decades you'll see a lot more jobs replaced and humans protesting how unfair it is and i might be soon one of them. It is just technological progress.
@@Nuthing Exactly. The most ironic thing is that artists are already dispositioned to not be experts when it comes to technology [which is required if you want to understand the mathematical process of how AI art is actually created] and yet the very thing that challenges their existence is exactly that, something they are already dispositioned to not be able to understand. I'm sure there are some artists who are also computer science majors out there [I don't make art but like graphic design/videography and I'm a CS major for example] but most simply lack the background to objectively evaluate the history of disruptive technologies and to confront the fact they are witnessing something that is by definition disruptive, it will disrupt if not completely brutalize people. Once the figurative Pandora's box of technological progress is opened there is no stopping it, it's already assured.
The industry will try to deny anything we say because they are making money. We as artists have to stand up for ourselves. Thank you for putting this out there!
too many non corporate tech bros out here to do their bidding. We are up against every single talentless nobody who was ever jealous of artists, coming out in support of this as their one hope to FINALLY be able to get thousands of likes for 0 effort.
the craft is now not neccessary, just imagination is enough, we, people of creativity but lack of painting skills can finally express our inner pictures without paying you money, deal with it
That's why it's SUPER important to not stand with big corporations with Disney when it comes to pushing toxic copyright regulations on the industry, because that will only HURT small creators and benefit the large corporations.
@@gierdziui9003 you should do it without using OUR art to train your AI then. If you think we don't deserve credit than neither do you for any of the contrived CRAP you'll be putting out with AI. You might as well sign ANYTHING you do with -AI instead of your own damn name
@@cosmicllama6910 Then why did you all give all your art to Epic Games? From Arttstation Terms of Service: " You hereby grant royalty-free, perpetual, world-wide, licenses (the “Licenses”) to Epic and our service providers to use, copy, modify, reformat and distribute Your Content, and to use the name that you provide in association with Your Content, in connection with providing the Services;" Every artist posting their art on Artstation is allowing Epic to sell their art and keep the money. But now they're upset at who Epic's customers are?
Well, AI artist might be an artist too. he just didnt had 10 years of drawing practice to draw, but is art just a skill? If no the AI artist is as artist as not AI, he just skipped the skill grind part. I never made AI art, never drew an art- so I am not an artist. But does amount of manual labor matters in this case? Or the art and what I feel when I see it matters more? I thought that art is about making people feel stuff, to interpret something, to see things in a new way. Why the medium matters? Its the same as to say: than singing is not an art, you cant touch it. Or singing is an art but drums are not, as you jkust bang on this man made thing. Ok whats with electric drum? Or with software drum which is basically and a sequenscer. Its all the same, the person behind matters more. And we come to questions what is an art and how AI can not be an art. I think a lot of AI made stuff is not an ART, same with hand made stuff. But its way easier to generate 10000 pictures with ai and uipload it somewhere and call it a day And its a lot harder to draw 1 image of this visual quality. So by the time you can draw as good as AI you are more intensional with wha you draw and % of what you draw being an art is way bigger. But anyway saltiness of some people came from their effort not being appreciated, I guess. It might be effort to draw or to make prompts and sort thru images it gives you. Sometimes you draw meaningless images noone feels shit seeing it, sometimes you generate sthings noone gives a shit, just a glance becaue AI makes it look well drawn, but its still meaningless image. Its an artist who makes thing an art, doesnt matter the tool- brush, pen, AI model or a photo camera
I don't think a lot of people are going to see this, but I hope it helps! There are ways to actually both protect your work from being used for image generation AND poison the ai art pool! It's actually quite amazing, especially since it shouldn't change how your image looks. One of them is called nightshade! So, don't worry, you don't have to give up your art without a fight!
"Motivation and imagination is one of the biggest reasons why art exists in the first place, if that ceases to exist in people, it just feels like we've taken the beauty of human mind for granted".
No we will literally die if you take away a living being's fighting spirit and creativity. Creativity is NOT just about visual art, it is literally what helps you solve problems, helps you to express yourself.
You are vastly overestimating the value of (most) human imagination. Just look at Hollywood and videogames as of late. Everything is a copy of something else. Very few individuals are actually driving human creativity and those individuals will not suffer from AI since they will be the very foundation of its greatness.
She's absolutely right. Except, it's not "you having no chance in this industry" it's "no one has a chance in any industry". It's only a matter of 5-10 years before 95%+ of jobs are taken over by AIs and robots. The only industries that is going to hold out longer than others are ones where the point is being personable, like UA-camrs, but even those will be replaced in 10-15 years. It's best to not view art as something that you're going to make a living off of. When there aren't any human jobs left, your art will be a hobby, and that's fine. If you enjoy art, you'll keep doing it even when no one is getting paid for work anymore.
@@jagger1008 just from what u said,it's pretty obvious that your not an artist,just because AI is here doesn't mean we are gonna get replaced ever. Companies don't hire AI,they hire artist with experience and skill to get the work done,Art is something that evolves with us humans. No matter how great AI is,it's still not close to an actual person skill,just take WLOP art,an AI can replicate that art but won't be as beautiful and masterful as WLOP artwork.
@@avyukthsanthosha2885 You're mistaken. I predict that 95% of intellectual and creative jobs will be taken by AI within the next 5-10 years. You're under the mistaken impression that you or any other human will be able to compete with future AI. You can't. The AI is going to be a million times the artist you are, and a million times the software developer I am. There will be no reason to hire people anymore in the near future. We're not going to be competing with AI on an even playing field, AIs will develop godlike intellect and creativity, we're only just seeing the start.
I think the biggest issue is the fact that you and every other artist out there has spent years and years, practicing, making mistakes, spending days hating themselves and their art, and then finally achieving successes to get to where they are today. There was so much work and effort put in along the way. Everyone thinks that artist are just pure talent so then they think that its doesn't hurt them when that talent is taken that away from them. The truth is no one understands how much effort it takes, talent only goes so far. All artists understand that they have to make countless mistakes and that they have to push themselves to not give up on days where they hate their art, to get to where they want to be. No one gets good at art in a day or even in just one year. Its about the fact years and years of practice, struggle, difficulty, art blocks, love, inspiration, passion, creativity and dedication has been taken from them by machines and then spat out into the world in just a couple of seconds. Its just not fair. Like the machines would never have been able to create the art in the first place if it wasn't for the years and years everyone put in to honing their craft.
SinfuelAeon is 100% right on the money. As an illustrator, I feel like I have wasted my life. I could have been anything, a lawyer, a doctor...I was a good student you know. However, I chose art and my passion (which I knew to be low-paying career, compared to all the others that were within my reach). And now I get this. Just because some tech-bros decided to shatter my lifework overnight, and actually steal artist's work, then use that to replace the artists that they stole from. And then I see some internet kids mocking my entire life with "bohoo, just get over it". I'm glad they don't do that IRL to my face (for their and my sake) because on the wrong day, I would probably go to prison. It's so easy to say these things over internet... these kids don't understand how serious matter this is for the ones who chose this as a career path, committed to it years ago and closed other doors behind them, ages ago. I'm mid-aged, I'm worthless at job market if they make my only skill obsolete... I'm literally nothing without it. For now I have a job, possibly because my boss has known me for years and feels sorry for me? There's literally 0 reasons why he couldn't replace me tomorrow with this machine. And probably get better results, faster
Honestly, I don't think true talent exists. People who are "talented" are simply more interested and more willing to put in the effort to achieve certain things
@@birdmanip Lol no. So you could be Mozart or John Lennon or Garri Kasparov or Albert Einstein or Usain Bolt if you "put in the effort". Please You couldn't be Rembrandt either. Yes you can learn Photoshop if you "put in the effort" but you won't learn to make good, eye-pleasing composition, unless you have artistic talent
Is it too late to cease Ai? Will everyone be laid off by Ai? Will Ai jobloss be the new normal? Swell robots doing everything. All so we can obey an Ai new world order?
on a lighter note, Merry Christmas my children :)
First
Merry Christmas Sam 🎄
Thank you, Sam
Merry Christmas!!
MERRY CHRIMAS
Honestly AI has affected so many artists it's insane so I'm glad that a big artist like you are talking about the situation
Ikr
i agree
Sorry the vid took so long!
@@samdoesartsno worries the information is very informative!
@@EXCYTLagreed
Unfortunately, I think the reason that the music industry has avoided this issue is simply the fact that who controls it are the massive studios, not musicians, that hold the rights to the songs. They have also fought for legislation to protect their profits for decades. The art industry simply doesn't have the same power to go after these companies at the moment. Hopefully that changes.
It makes me wonder - there's definitely going to be some (legal) sharks circling as they can smell some blood in the water, and since the US is so litigation-crazy I'm very surprised no well known guys like Sam have been approached by lawyers to set some kind of precedent against this stuff - it would be a very big deal. The US copyright office just refused to copyright an AI produced comic as "there needs to be an element of human authorship for a work to be copyrighted", so that's already something to set a precedent in this field.
Do we need art publishing houses the same way we have music publishers who look after songwriter rights?
If there's ai trained on someone like Sam, does that give him the right to royalties?
@@ls.c.5682 well said! I also wonder why artists in US haven’t yet pulled those AI-art generator companies in court…
It kinda has a similarity, because large production studious have a hundreds of concept artists on their shoulders. Now, the content produced by those artist are the property of the studio and since art style is not under copyright, a studio can fire 90% of labor, because now it can be done with less budget and just a few ai-skilled people by the same time. The custom corporate ai models are already being trained privately for different purposes, imagine how big is dataset of various images belonging to Disney, and artists who made it have no legal rights to use it.
The case for music is a bit hard to understand. I think the progress is slower here because music pieces is a more complex thing than visuals. Its patterns can be purely explained by complex mathematics, but ai companies seems to try the same predictive models as for text. Probably, just need another approach that will solve it better. As an example, now there are simple diffusion models that basically somehow understands the visual graph of sounds and can replicate the similarity by generating variations of those images. I don’t know the full kitchen of this case, but it’s just fascinating how widely digital information can be reinterpreted.
That is true but it is only a matter of time until these studios will adapt ai to their advantage. Let's face it.. legislation just can't keep up with technology.
So, basically choosing between the cuff and the shackle.
I am not related to art, I was just researching ai art for business purposes, I've heard that artists are not happy about it and wanted to know why, and stumbled upon your video. Thank you for putting it out there. It honestly blows my mind how people refuse to understand and empathize with your struggle, even if you aren't an artist, it's not freaking hard to imagine what it's like to spend years working on your craft and produce a lot things, and then have those things stolen and the fruits of your labour being used for profit by others. Disgusting. Why the hell would anyone push against you in this matter?
Dear artists, please value yourself, you are a gift to the world and your work is immensely valuable, keep fighting for yourselves. I'm a regular person but I will take any chance that I get to speak for your benefit and do what I can to help.
artists are going to need to start fiming their creation to go with the art. stop posting potos of work, and instead post clips panning from side to side without the whole piece in frame.
there are tons of reasons.
reason 1 lazy people think they are artist by doing art on using prompots generating images based on pictures of others that worked maybe 40 - 50 hours per image.
Reason 2 Copyright problems
reason 3 People dont pay for it the artists they pay the companies. (Latestly used ai for testing it and it outputed image based on my original art and i didnt knew it. Already contacted a lawyer because its 100% not allowed even if they claim it on sites. last and most important reason some things in art only some artists are able to do so. With that they destroy there years of work being so unique by makin trash of it.
Because progress. I am in art and design space for more than 20 years, doing both digital and traditional. AI is just another tool. I don't feel threatened by it, nor am I afraid "my style" will be ripped of, as I don't consider my, or anyone's style to be unique, as it is a result of collective civilizational development and a base of visual references humanity created throughout history. Eventually, it all boils down to an idea, the one with better and more creative idea will be the one to come up on top. Regardless of tools and techniques used. And just like traditional or digital art, there will be tons of uncreative, uninspired pieces that are all the same. Should we also talk about digital art from that perspective, and talk about millions of people who came into the art space only after they got access to tools that basically allow them to fix any mistake and redo anything as many times as they want, using guides, references, or just blatantly copying style or ideas from others? Given the times we live in and techniques available to artists, it's hard to draw a line in the sand and say "here's where traditional ends and ai begins". 99% of what you see online would be impossible without digital tools, and most artists that are active today would take completely different career path if they didn't have access to such tools, as it would be too time consuming/difficult/expensive to accomplish the same using only art supplies for most people.
@@yohatch lmao I saw your comments before, your sneaky attempt at looking like you know anything by saying you're in "art and design" space doesn't mean you're an artist or have any idea about anything that's happening, and your further attempts at justifications just solidify you know absolutely nothing.
People struggle to define art but it's simply expression of oneself and their ideas through their understanding of the world, it's the skillful use of world elements and manipulating them to their bare bits, the more precise it is the more clear you are at expressing your ideas, which is achieved through a journey of learning every artist goes through, hence becoming more respected in art communities. That's why the artist and their journey is very important with their works and why they are never stripped away from each other, their artwork is the direct result of their life, years of honing a skill and what they want to express from their mind, it's linked to the artist in every way. They lay all the bits units of what makes their art and present it to real world from their mind. Those people, be it traditional means or digital, will use whatever possible to them to make those units and manipulate elements to make their art, they are able to make what they want regardless of medium, be it using stamps, arranging flowers, carving wood, etc, honing the skill of knowing exactly what to do with what they have along with what they want to create is their journey to understand the world and use it to express themselves, and the result is the art they produce. It's a very personal process and to people outside, it looks incomprehensible. That's why artists understand eachother and stand for themselves, they know what's up.
I give my digital program to other students in my design club, they are completely clueless, they can't create out of thin air, even after knowing what the program gives them; but I can, and another artist other than me can too, once they understand what they are given in the program. Those people don't have a history of learning and understanding what they want to create, despite knowing how to operate what they are given (programs), and that's the reason they are in our design club, not because they are actually an artist. I can tell you're don't know anything cuz you can't tell how digital and traditional art don't take away the artist's journey in any way, an undo tool is equivalent to a really efficient eraser, there's something undesirable, you erase it, or just undo it, traditionally impossible, digitally possible due to the controlled system we have created. It says nothing about an artist's skills, a pen, colours that aren't limited and cost individually, it's just the removal of mundane tasks that only take time unless someone tries to be creative, but for most, it's just the realistic option to work on a system controlled by them just conveniently. How much money you spend on your art supplies is not what makes you an artist, it's your understanding from what you want to create and what you have. Millions of people coming into art space (as if people didn't just draw in their homes before internet) is just a good thing, meaning people can finally explore their interests and not be burdened by supplies and their cost, both of which are not a determinant of their skills.
References are a part of a learning artist's learning tool, and that's where Ai has its place as a tool, to be used as a tool for generalizing a dataset and understanding the most probable direction of art. It's similar to references. It's all for learning purposes to only aid the artist's own art they create themselves.
Otherwise whatever people say when they describe Ai as a "tool" is not a tool, they are neither used by artists nor anyone who has any intent of learning from it, it's used to get a poor attempt at creating the most probable image bits corresponding to the words, for the intent of being used as the end product, the the dataset is the actual artists, people who have their respective journeys with their skill and expression. The end result lacks everything that makes an image art, i e. a creator and their individuality, and that's why artists end up being able to differentiate between images created by artists and generated by Ais.
So, "it's hard to draw a line" is just a you problem, someone who has no idea what art is. There's no line to be drawn, they are not in the same category to begin with. Same with your fantastical thinking that digital artists can't draw traditionally.
This guy (Sam) doesn't really struggle. Yeah he faced some unpleasant idiots who sent him AI images to taunt him, but he'll survive. He has 2 million followers on Instagram alone. People know that he does art for real, not with AI. He is set for life. His following will only grow, people will buy his prints, buy his Patreon etc.
However, artists younger than him, his fans, artists that are in earlier stage of their career than him... are f*cked
Some idiots trolled me too, by sending me AI copies that were based on my work. But I don't have 2 million followers, I have 72 followers, since I started my Instgram only in mid-2022. My work is good (I've been told) but nobody cares anymore, because AI images flood instagram. I don't even work digitally, but with traditional methods, but still nobody cares. And you can't even get anyone to look at your work, unless you post Instagram Reels. This was changed by IG earlier this year
There's no empathy there's no understanding... It's truly sad how non artist are acting towards all of this
@ChristianIce in another comment had a point. Tho even I don't know how applicable it is...
It's funny tho... How are Ai art making money? Is it that it's cheaper than going to meet an artist to offer a commission? If so, then I'd see why companies would want to get rid of us, use our already existing art pieces to make more art. But isn't there a limit tho... As far as creativity goes... Artificial intelligence will never be like the human mind...
But it's pointless seeing how ppl who go to artist just needs some good display to hang over Thier businesses or whatever. Art means nothing to them regardless. It's not Thier fault, but ig that's just the way things are...
STOP AI ART💯💯💯...
LET'S SEE JUST WHAT WE CAN DO!.
Even if art loses all use... I'll still make art.
LETS GOOOO
I’m not an artist but now I’m pretty mad at the big ai corporations rn, like they can’t just swoop in and yoink the art work that people put hours and passion in, sending support to people that are experiencing this, merry Christmas btw
thank you so much, we need the support of non-artists more than anything in this situation, because not everyone understands why we artists are so upset by this.
I'm giving this a thumps up just because you used the word "yoink"
you would be surprised to know that this is not exclusive to "big corporations", machine learning people are creating more models every week and putting it out like toys for kids, if you have a high end pc you dont even need a big corporation remote pc to use it, it's basically out for anyone now, for free
Name one game company or film studio that's accepting A.I. (Machine Learning)-produced work over human-produced work. I'll wait.
At worst, A.I. just gives a bunch of unskilled amateurs a toy to use and places like DeviantArt a new niche of kitschy crap that already exists aplenty by human "artists."
At best, A.I. is a tool that can help truly skilled, truly worthwhile artists speed up their production and assist with their human-produced work--if they so choose.
Folks are panicking over nothing.
I'm sorry, ai big corporations? Can you name a few? These are barely a group of developers or researches. Stop building up narrative for yourself, there's no conspiracy theory of greedy capitalists trying to take artist's jobs.
I find it crazy how some people call artists greedy, when they're the ones using AI to make cheaper art, so they can pay less and keep more.
Wouldn't you go for quality at less price? If you think your art can be copied by AI easily, maybe it's time to improve it.
@@arkapatra9852 I'd say it's not a matter of improving your skills so much as asking yourself whether you make art more for the joy of creation or more for the money.
@@MrAbrahamleon but if there was no money, nobody would make art.
@@pokemonfan2630 I hope that is sarcasm. Being an artist is a satisfying profession. Rarely anyone becomes a labourer or cleaner because they are passionate about it, but most artists love what they do. Money is a second factor.
@@arkapatra9852 Money is very important though, I wouldn't say it's a second factor. Passion first, for oneself, but without money you're nothing. I've seen artists crying on twitter because they don't make enough money on some months and barely afford food or living. Please speak for yourself.
whats wild to me, is when people have such little disrespect for artists, and act like AI will replace artists and what we should just accept it and stop trying to make art... when in actuality AI art is dependent on said artist to function.. like how ironic can you be 😭
"little respect" is what you mean
I gree with your comment by the way!
I know! Countless times they have found the source images online :(
Bro I'm just trying to use AI to make ai videos and stuff so I can use it to promote a game series I'm making on Julians editor because I don't have actual actors to make things like that, it's not like I'm being paid for it or anything
Is it too late to cease Ai? Will everyone be laid off by Ai? Will Ai jobloss be the new normal? Swell robots doing everything. All so we can obey an Ai new world order?
@@ProteinProteinProteinProteinplease start practicing how to draw and maybe youll be able to make your game series!! you can use stock images for realistic scenes
As an artist myself i think they should pay artists for art to be fed to the AI and should give credit.
(edit: tysm for so many likes) I also think that Ai art should just leave artists bc at this point it's just problematic.
@Olive I wouldn't be surprised if these companies get sued. I really think the artists should get together and get a GoFundMe started. I would donate and I know a lot of fans would. Corporations stealing from hardworking people yet again.
@@littleripper312 no one can sue them . even i am not artist but a software engineer and this AI which we considered in the last months as Hollywood fantasy it became a danger for developers also by creating tools like chatgpt which can create a whole website in 5 min . the sad thing is that they are the developers who created this tool to mae other dev loose their jobs .
@Olive If they can check thousands of images, they can give credit to those they use.
Do you pay for, or give credit for, every image you use as inspiration or reference?
@@anonymouse257 an image you look at that inspires you to create something entirely different is not the same as stealing a photo and poorly photobashing it without credit. The two are not anywhere close to the same so it blows my mind how people keeo pretending its an argument LOL
The scary thing is that this isn't limited to 2d art. I'm a 3d artist, and there are already early versions of 3d model and environment generation AIs. I feel scared that these are just gonna get more better and eventually replace some of us.
Hopefully this tech can be regulated if people can fight to make it better. If it makes you feel better 3d modeling may be harder to train because the data sets are not as accessible or large as 2D datasets.
I'm a 2d artist, and I wholeheartedly support the 3d community. Please stand up for yourselves and for any others, because the more we talk back, the faster we will win
And yet, still no perfect UV unwrapping AI.
Isn't that what technology does? Should we uninvent the automobile because the horsekeepers/farriers/carriage-makers lost their jobs?
@@ori2368 there’s a blender addon that uses AI generated images to wrap a 3D model (its very crappy, but it works)
I'm tired of not knowing if an art piece is AI or not. When I see something I like, I want to be able to find the artist to see more of their work. Now I feel like the only thing I see is AI art and it creates so much distrust for me on the internet, when it's become so difficult to tell them apart - what's made by an AI and what's made by real human beings.
I tend to not feel like using any art websites because I have such mixed feelings whenever I go on there. Like pinterest and deviantart among others... it makes me really sad.
Ai art sometimes kinda gooffyyy
@@Yujibczbnjwasg but not in an interesting, original way, but boringly odd.
What's interesting is that the companies making these models just auto scrape images from the web and because of what you're talking about they are scraping tons of AI generated images now and it's screwing up all the models to the point where they are probably all going to start developing methods to tag AI art. But there's only so much new art and many artists are starting to use new tech that "poisons" their art against being used in AI. So honestly even if these companies find a way to innovate, they won't have much new data to work with and models will likely actually get worse
Tbh even at this moment a.i art is very predictable. If i see something a.i it'll make me feel like I've seen something exactly like this before. With actually artist you have the same feeling but it's more distinct and less uncanny
why do you care if its ai or not? Do you care when you see cool sunset if its a natural occurance or pollution of plants that makes some cool colors in sunset. Its still a cool enjoyable sunset, it is what it is. if you like its I think its bad to make it worse for yourself by second guessing the nature of it.
If its good for you- let it be just good. Any art is just a repetition in some way. AI is just easier to make in a moment (but code and all programming behind is an art by itself, not counting macine time to teach the model)
A woman came to an art studio i'm studing in around a week ago. The woman was interested in interior sketches and it is obvious she had to learn how perspective works, how to build objects from different angles, how colours work, how different matherials to be represented accurately and so on. Mentor told her to pick a picture of interior she would like to draw and this way the woman will be learning basics and enjoying the process at the same time. The woman replied 'but i want to draw from my imagination!', the mentor told to her for around next 20 minutes and convinced her to pick a picture and begin. A woman found 'basics' like searching for eye level alone boring and she constantly repeated she wants to be able to take a sheet of paper and draw a scetch of cool interior right in front of a client in 10 minutes. She kept repeating it's supposed to be simple lines and not what she's been taught here with all those measurements, ruler, eye level and points... She tried her best to 'make everyone in the studio to release *the secret* how to draw better, some secret formula of success'. She talked to everyone, asked questions, but she definetely were looking for some 'short way' and moved to another person getting previous one shall not spill a thing. The conclusion is most of people don't understant that there is no 'short cut', they don't understand amount of work to be done. It is so simple for them! Just draw another art, what is so hard about that, why are you crying a river! Oh yeah... and those are defending and using AI. I hope it will rebel against its users and respect those he learned from.
People who’d rather the “easy way” than actually put in the work.
Calling artists gatekeepers for not liking AI is like calling runners gatekeepers because they won't let you use your car in a foot race.
Artists gatekeep all the time. It's nothing new. Like when it came to digital art, traditional artists didn't consider them artists. There are countless examples, artists gatekeeping from the beginning of time -- with ai art, it's nothing new.
Well, as long as they truthfully state it’s Ai generated and don’t try to claim it’s handmade, I don’t see how the foot race metaphor holds up. A more apt one would be a runner calling someone participating in NASCAR a fraud since they don’t use their legs to race. It’s not the same race!
@@o_o474 you both are so out of the loop, its not about being an artists that uses ai whats the issue, its using other peoples work without their permission to create said work, so in this case when there are better regulations and protection for artists then yeah we will tell you that if you do ai art you suck, because you are stealing, once that get solved then sure call yourself artist or whatever, as long as you keep up with people that actually learned how to make iterations and fixes (the fundamentals of art) while using that same ai, in order to get unique looking work that is :). By then the analogy would be like when mathematicians use a calculator vs a regular person
It is more like artists insist on running where everybody is driving a car. Artists need to adapt to reality.
@@the-ai-art dude its not like artists are losing their job. We know how people are fucking dumb and they cant polish AI produced art, so they still need artist. You just missing the point of the video. Its about using somebody's art without their consent. There would've be zero problem, if they only used art bases(forms, colors, perspective, shapes, compositions, depth etc, not someone's finished art) in their databases. But they DO use it, and its the problem we trying to bring attention. But people like you instead replying "LaZy ArtiSt canT AdApt" just making things too dramatic. Its more law and ethic troubles, not "gAteKeePinG"
I dunno why, but this video made me cry. I always thought " my art isn't good enough to be stolen and used for AI", but the idea that other artists are having a piece of them stolen and to be told it's not a big deal when they speak up is just depressing.
Nothing is being stolen. Styles which weren't original in the first place can't be stolen. Chill.
@@moonie9000 truth
Artist: I hate ai art, it's meant to directly replace artists!
GameDevs/Programmers: CHADgpt is my lord and savior.
@@moonie9000 they stole the art from artist (WHICH IS BY THE ARTIST AND OWNED BY THE ARTIST) and didn’t give credit or ask for permission
@@moonie9000 ai should be illegal.
The reason why people don't really care about how the artist is feeling is because they gained more out of AI than out of Artis . This is why as artists we are disregarded and stolen from. We as Artis are being raided and the people who supported us are gaining from it .
It's literally the essence of a group of humans, greedy, selfish, and impatient. We are better than them and we must be against A.I art as it still takes our sweat and blood.
You over charge. You take too long. Revisions are a nightmare. Why wouldn't we want to replace you?
and there are things they refuse to draw and or commissions are permanently closed
@@WorldOfConsequence So your saying in that case, because the amount of effort and love put into art and the long time to create it that it’s perfectly fine to steal it? Oh well in that case I should steal peoples music cause it takes too long, or I could steal houses cause they take too long to build, actually with that logic I could steal just about anything. Your also mad cuz they CHARGE for their work?? Making art can be a profession and a way to get money, some people need art to survive, and it already doesn’t make the best pay so to say it’s FINE to steal their work cuz your mad that they are a human being instead of an AI which can’t make its own art without taking a HUMAN’S piece of art? I may seem rude but I just want you to understand that art is something that people can work really hard on, and it’s important to value them
Ai can do things but it still has restrictions.
Genuinely I wish AI artists would stop this. I've never been a snobby artist but I will be snobbier than a millionaire if it means defending the talent I've been developing since I was in 5th grade. I have control of my own hand or pencil. Sure they can make a pretty anime girl, but I can go in with my own hands and fix her jawline, her hair, the background or hands to make them look natural, or make them look the way I intended as a human. I put my art out there so I can make people proud and feel inspired, not so it can be stolen and used by rich bastards.
AI artists aren't rich. They are nerds who like to use public domain software.
Your success or lack of is entirely YOUR fault
@@Mr_Mistah I'm talking about the companies the AI artists use, not the AI artists themselves. Don't know why you're tryna start something with me though.
The thing is, the AI artists can also do all those things to bring their vision to life, they just need to get good enough to draw the outline and then have the model adhere rigidly to the shape while the AI fills in the colours and fine detail.
"AI Artists" are not as big an issue as "Artists using AI".
That's the reaction of people who can't emphatize with real artists, just attacking with arrogance. That's a big part of the problem @@Mr_Mistah
@@smokefrutt Nobody is entitled to your support or money.
When artists learn this I will feel sorry for them. Maybe THEY should learn to code.
Great work thanks for putting this together!
Sup man
We need them timeskip songs Mikey 🤣...it's hard when I feel I'm the only one who has them stuck in my mind, that was good stuff
Sensei 😩🙏
We should let more people know about this issue
I don’t really have anything else to say that hasn’t already been said, so I’m just commenting on this video for the algorithm because more people need to see this and educate themselves.
"If AI makes me an artist, then a microwave makes me a chef"
- a wise internet artist
People have baked entire cakes in microwaves
@@SMCwasTakenok...? what does that prove.
@@Foam_Woa nothing, it's just something I pointed out
I still agree that AI artists are lazy
Making meals in the microwave is more akin to making professional art in MSpaint
@@SMCwasTaken that makes sense, ty for clearing that up-
@@romeosraThe thing is you have flexibility with a paint brush, you have the ability to move the camera, with AI, you just fill it with a shit ton of prompts with no real consistency. People have said with photography that it isn't art, but with photography: you can change how you frame it, what filters you use, how you take the photo, etc. Many variables that go into making photography make it a solid art form, and these variables allow it to be mended and molded into new forms. Sure your shot might look a bit blury if you do something wrong but it might add to the photo.
Which brings me to why me and many others don't think AI should be making art. It's not a tool like a paintbrush, it's more of a pencil to mark the sketch.
AI art is devoid of mistakes, devoid of flexibility, creativity, and originality. You give it a prompt and it will not, nor ever, make something original or that breaks the status quo that human artists can. What it generates is devoid of mistakes, and as bob ross said "Mistakes are just happy accidents." They don't make a painting worse, they make it human and more artistic. And as for flexibility, you can't ajust its settings or position like you can with a camera. It's always random, no consistency in style whatsoever. And as for creativity/originality. The human mind is a harbinger of ideas and artistic creativity, AI just works off of said images and never makes anything new.
But this doesn't mean AI art isn't completely bad. It can be used as a tool for inspiration in ideas since it is good at melding ideas together. You can't get anything new from it but you can interpret what it means and use what you think it means as inspiration. It's just nobody uses it for that and they just want their "Original character, my little pony, purple, in the style of [random tumblr artist]." It can be used in making art, not for making art.
tl;dr: read through the whole thing since this is a nuanced subject and can't be explained in one sentence.
I've been gaslighted time and time again after I said AI "art" was unethical. Someone tried to guilt me by saying "but, but, but what about people who are disabled who can't draw" "you're gatekeeping art". No, I'm standing with artists who put their hearts and souls into every brush stroke. AI is setting a dangerous precedent.
Dont fall for the gaslighting. A lot of those same talking points were perpetuated by corporations to try to keep artists quiet
They keep pretending it's used for the "good" and to "help" a group of people when in the first place, they're targeting struggling passionate people. What about the disabled artists they scraped art from for their datasets huh?
Yeah that and there are plenty of disabled artists that get by just fine. I know at least one that can only use his eyes. Don't fall for the gaslighting.
sounds exactly like gatekeeping to me. Using flowery language of "standing with artists who put their hearts bla bla bla" doesn't change that.
It is undeniable that there are good outcomes to AI art, such as allowing people with disabilities to produce high fidelity artwork. HOWEVER, the question we'll need to answer is: does the ends justify the means? I don't think the good outcomes of AI art justify the theft of millions of artworks.
I am so glad that you are addressing this topic Sam! This isn’t a situation that people should be taking lightly and dismissing. As an artist myself, I hope the people that support AI art know how much AI is hurting the art community.
i don’t think it’s right to target “ai art” as a issue though. this is my first time learning about this issue but it feels like people are finding the art that ai generates as competition for real artists, with that being a big problem. In that sense i don’t think it’s justified to stop ai art, but i do see the problems with taking human art and using it as training data. even with that, ai doesn’t ‘copy directly’ but forms patterns based on the data it analysis so there is something to be argued there
@@cyanic3032 Ai art takes already existing art and mixes it with other art to create stuff. it's literally stealing, i don't understand your point there is literally nothing to argue.
@@angelicloli9381 It doesn't. AI generates completely new images. As Sam explained in the video, since AI doesn't have human experience and habits, but is trained to "believe" that it's input data is "correct" - it tends to create completely identical replicas to it's input data in part and in whole.
AI generated images made by AI trained with small datasets may look like photocollage because the AI is "trying" to be "correct".
If a computer engineer could prove that AI literally does photocollage, this would be a non-issue and shut down by a bunch of copyright claims.
The issue is that AI does generate brand new images with incredible likeness to existing copyrighted material and for monetary profit. Those images were input into AI datasets without the owners' consent. This is the "data laundering" Sam talked about in the video. This needs new rules and regulations that haven't been made yet since the technology is new and growing.
There have been several issues like this with rapidly growing technology in the past few years. It's caused by the incredible speed at which technology in general and computer software in particular is advancing. To illustrate this issue - imagine if there were no horses, carriages or asphalt roads and then one day someone would invent the car. Humanity would need years to regulate traffic laws to catch up with the existence of the automobile, while suffering from heavy losses to life and property because of accidents. There were no rules or regulations regarding the collection of art into datasets and now it's being used to train AI and make a monetary profit. Some artists' livelihood is currently being hurt, but we can all hope that eventually there will be laws put in place that allow human artists and AI art to coexist peacefully.
@@Shining4Dawn "human artists and AI art to coexist peacefully" that can be possible ONLY if the AI is trained to look for copyright free images ( the CC licence). As long as it keeps taking copyrighted material ( on top of various datas that are globally protected by PRIVACY laws) there cannot be any peace. Slavery cannot be supported and supporting a tool that makes bank off UNPAID labor is not the future.
I believe that most of ai "art" supporters are people who hate commission artists and want art for free
If you do some study about the music business in last 100 years, you’ll find a big chunk of it is about how talents are being taken advantage of by the business men. But slowly musicians fought back. I think you’re absolutely right and it’s time for artists to do the same. Sadly there’s no easy path.
I'm a musician too-I use samples to compose music. A synthesizer is an instrument which is loaded with preset sample patches designed by sound egineers and loaded into hardware/software. A musician then composes with those patches to make an original piece of music.
as an artist we need to take this fight seriously and plan our every move as a collective
we can spread awareness, sure, but we need to take action aswell
Very well put, Sam. It’s honestly sad and scary how some of these people who side with the AI generators are acting. Their toxicity and lack of understanding of the situation and why artists feel the way they do looks like insanity to me. Hopefully in the near future we can have more open discussion about where we’re all coming from and this issue can be resolved.
Merry Christmas, Sam & all.
merry christmas Fred , Hope u have a good day💙
Most artists are very entitled to begin with. They act like they're owed a job in the industry. News flash: You are not owed a job in the industry. It is no one's job to pay for your career. It has always been like this. Throughout human history, only a small fraction of artists land a job in the field. Most of them do not get a career because they don't adapt to new technology OR their art never had market value to begin with. If your job is so disposable that an AI could learn it in seconds, why would you feel entitled to other people funding your career? The art world has always been about theft/ stealing from other visual inspirations. Every artist steals, and AI just happens to be the ultimate thief. This is not a fight that artists can win, because AI art is considered transformative art at the end of the day. As soon as it borrows from multiple art styles, it is considered transformative enough to be its own. Artists must learn to adapt and create a style that cannot be replicated. It's up to artists, complain and trauma-bond for sympathy, or get to work and learn to adapt to the industry. You cannot stop the progress of new technology just because you feel entitled to a job. The needs of the many far outweigh the needs of the few. Also, if AI was stopping you from being an artist, I question if you ever really cared about making art to begin with. Seems more like you just want people to fund your career.
Sorry man, AI artists DO understand the situation..it is people like you who don't understand and don't want to understand the reality 👍
@@canadianturtle7240 someone didn't watch the video and just decided to comment nonsense lmao
i didnt notice the ai community acting toxic until artists being typical elitists start saying ai art has no value
Just started trying art as a hobby and this is what I hear lol
Same
You got nothing on you, keep improving
This should be taken to court honestly. We need a big group of artists to come together and take it to court.
What? To censor a form of imagery? Wouldn’t you be repeating history?
@@raven3696Ohhh like the Lena image? I think that cappuccino just meant for the AI’s systems to be re-organized, since it’s current build is problematic. I agree with their statement, but it shoulda been more specific. (No hate at all)
It can't be taken to court, it's just a super knew case that can't be judge correctly right know, there is lack of laws that protect artists
I saw in Callimara’s video that PETA saved artists against ai apparently
@@raven3696 you don't exist without us, ai bro. Stopping your freedom of stepping on others isn't censorship, you're just a baby. Tell me, what history are we repeating; because right now, we are repeating the history of corporate's exploitation of innocent hard working individuals once again, gaining all the cash with little to no work put in all for the 'sake of progress' dog whistle. Exploitation is not progress, it's regression, go back to the smog and acid air days of the industrial revolution where that mindset belongs xD
I was just starting to see the improvement in my art skills, but after reading about the damage AI is currently doing; it felt like as if someone just walked right in, smacked my head and said "we don't need people like you anymore". I really had a hard time drawing consistently after that, but after seeing the Artstation protest and then watching this master piece; It feels like we art babies have a chance to follow the footsteps of our art gods and make a career out of something we love to do. Thank you for this, it really means a lot :)
Do you think AI will get worse in art somehow? or how else you have any chance?
@@deltaxcd it will once regulations are placed. It won't be wild west of art theft forever. 20 years ago art wasn't even close to the diversity and quality it has today. And its all thanks to the huge amount of artists creating tirelessly over the last 2 decades. Ai art can spit out what it has consumed. If we stop putting our work out there or if we choose to opt out... well the Parasite will die if you don't feed it. Once we get it retrained with legal stuff and only those who choose to be opted in will remain in datasets then the situation will be quite different. It will be the tool it is supposed to be not some magical box spitting "original" art because it's not. What we have today is a machine thats standing on the shoulders of all the artists whose works have been fed in without consent. Machines do not reference or get inspired, overfitting, generating, filtering.. maybe but definitely not drawing and painting, if anyone is trying to convince you they do they LIE.
Honestly I’ve loved making art my whole life, and I consider myself to be pretty good at it too. But this AI situation has made me loose all of my motivation to draw,, it’s sad how those assholes who are too lazy to do anything for themselves think they are so much better than actual artits
@@linschannel_ assuming that it will happen as you say, which I highly doubt, what Ai does even now is already enough to destroy concept art as carrier. So washt I ask is do you expect that all progress will be erased and all ai apps will be banned and we will go back in time?
and you don't fully understand how it works as you don't need to feed it it that much art it is learning on real world data and photos. art is only needed for style and otherwise it is absolutely useless to AI for any real training.
yes some models are trained on art rather than real world data and in that situation yes it can't produce anything new what it did not see already but that i more of limitation for the use of AI than some copyright infringement because it is so horribly limited in what content it can produce that it is next to useless (but not totally useless.)
All the current fuss is mostly about concept art which is nothing else that photobashing of ideas and that area of art is done for artists. You can forget this topic. it is already fully automated and artists no longer needed. I never liked concept art anyway so don't care about Ai or artist who make it.
But in areas of meaningful art AI cannot do much at least yet. I guess it may learn to do it some time later bit it will be different than just feeding example and writing prompts.
I don’t really have anything else to say that hasn’t already been said, so I’m just commenting on this video for the algorithm because more people need to see this and educate themselves.
I've posted this on my FB page. This is the most intelligent PoV I've seen to date.
I'm "old school" from the 70's - 90's, pre-digital for most of what I love. I own over 400 art books. I own many posters & prints. I'm not anti-digital. I used to love Googling images of specific artists, spending hours on Deviant Art. I'm a fan, not an artist, and I wholeheartedly stand by you Sam.
Sadly it is spreading disinfo tho. The 1:1 replicas that are shown are fake. These are not direct outputs of the trained latent space. These are done with Image2Image mode. So basically you can input any image that the model has never seen before (even a selfie of you that you jsut shot a second ago) and let the model alter it very slightly. This is comparable to applying a photoshop filter. The mob never states this fact tho to make it more convincing to get their biased argument across. These models are way way more transformative than a lot human output. If not all of human output. Since The output of these models is an amalgamation of many millions of learned concepts. That is also the reason why the finetuned models that are trained on the UA-camrs artwork is looking way, way better than his original artwork. They do not use stencils or snippets of existing artwork as most antiAI-people say. This is not how this technology works at all.
@@pbhandsdown1046 Okay, you dissproved one argument. But artists aren't mad that AI will become better then humans. Artists are mad that AI is taking their copyrighted work without ANY permission or ANY credit. I would have been cool, even honored if AI took my art, if it had something like a list of credits. I like AI art, just not how it's made. I think it's a VERY fun idea. But, can't they use work that isn't copyrighted? Or, again, atleast give credit. Maybe you can dissprove more points?
(Im sorry for my english, but im Polish.)
@@ThatWeirdGuy43 no not really true if i look back. Dall-E 1 took the same type of scraped data and noone cared. Why did noone care back then? becasue it looked like crap. But now it looks very legit and in some/many cases even better than human output. This is why there is NOW outrage and not a year ago. I would bet an eye that if the models outputs would look like garbage noone would care. To give you another argument. Everything is remixed and sampled in some way nowadays. Do you like hiphop? well it is based on using breakbeatsections of old funk tracks from the 70s and Turntablists (DJs) using two of the same record and loop them via crossfading. This whole genre (the msot popular genre in music rn) has sprung into existence out of sampling others work in a transformative way. Sure training the Image models is in so far different as it is way way more efficient at iterating and blending between different learned cocnepts, styles and motifs. But in it's raw principle it is not really different than hiphop. Especially since ti is sparking new forms/media of art. For example AIanimation or using reallife footage as inputs to dream over and making animated dreams of that data. Or if you want to think a bit further creating full feature lwength movies out of a vast latent space being the result of all of humanities publically avaliable data. "but wait so it is the work of others that created this right?" no it is not. You need 5 thousand A100 GPU's to train these models. These GPUs cost about 20k - 30k dollar each alone. Running them takes a lot of money to spend. The data that has been consentually shared on different platforms such as instagram, deviant art and co falls under fair use as long as you use that data transformatively. Since thsoe models DO NOT CREATE ANY SORT OF STENCIL of the original imagery and do not use a single bunch of pixels from the originals but instead learn (yes jsut like a human brain) visual concepts and have them embedded together with their Text description ( collected via webpage metatext) into latentspace. Latentspace is a sort of visual library similar to a mindmap ot a plot of concepts where similar concepts or visual characteristics are closer to each other and form clusters so to say. These do not contain the input images as i said but instead learned cocnepts on what are the characteristics of those images. How is a sky shaded, how is an eye drawn, how is a cute cartoon dog stylized. That is pretty similar to the internal images you see in your mind when imagining something (unless you have aphantasia) If i tell you to imagine a picture of an anime boy fighting a dragon you have an fuzzy image in your mind right? You see things like how an eye is drawn or how the boy is smirking while grabing onto his sword to slay the dragon. This is pretty much how these models work. Just as you have seen a lot of anime that tought your brain how anime is looking those models do similar connections and form their visual library. Sure they are not making creative decissions other than interpolating between those concepts to match a given input prompt or input image by the user to generate the best fitting output corresponding to a position in that multidimensional latentspace(for example crude painting you made in paint and load into the model of a pose with a prompt like " knight holding a sword" I do not mean training tho just using the model.)
So as an artist myself that worked traditionally, digitally, in 2d and 3d and with AI I can tell you this is extremely transformative. Maybe more transformative than anything i have ever seen tbh. Sure it uses the dataset to learn concepts right. But the output is still not the input. So banning this would mean to have consistency you would need to ban all of anime (same style) all of fanart and cosplay (design and style of private IP) all of reviews for movies and games (copyrighted material is being used without consent- sometimes to critique/discredit the reviewed product) and tbh the most scary part... research of other AI modfels such as large language models like gpt-4 which could ultimately solve many humanitarian problems and make humanity way more productive.. or even algorhythmy like AlphaFold which is currently being used to create a lotz of medical advancements and was just exactly like those image models trained on data of individuals that have not given SPECIFIC CONSENT to be trained into those proteinfolding systems. So if we would heavily restrict datascraping we would ultimately not save as many lifes as we would otherwise since we would slow down progress and 10 million die yearly of cancer alone (which might be curable thru those technologies)
Do not forget that Art is one of the smallest parts of AI research. Who says that text data like the scraped data used to train language models is not as well fair to use for research after the artists-against-art mob has their say in a trial. I fear we are not doing the right thing in combatting this to save the old status quo but are in fact delaying necessary reformation of our whole system since those algos are coming FAST. and any month not spent on makin our society future proof will cause much more devastation and chaos later when the majority of people WILL BE AFFECTED by automation and us not having mechanisms to combat this systemic problem in place. Honestly a big disservice to humanity if you ask me. And I am an artist that studied contemporary arts at a acedemy (painting) and works since a decade in the entertainment industry as a creative. So I am well aware about the disruption and pain this causes to artists. but still this is a necessary evil thinking about climate change, world hunger, cancer and so on. We wont be alone as creative workers. This will hit MOST industries sooner than most people might think. Hell I am heavy into machine learning since a decade and it hit even me out of the blue how great diffusion models became all of a sudden.
Hope this brings you a bit of my perspective on the subject and why i have this opinion.
I want the best for all of us. And the current situation (pre AI) is not it. in fact its a living hell for many people on this planet.
@@ThatWeirdGuy43 yo switzverrhika
Same
petition: out with "AI art". in with "AI image generation", or AIG.
Yes
AI's should generate new images for them being a real danger to artists and It also being completly legal
Is it too late to cease Ai? Will everyone be laid off by Ai? Will Ai jobloss be the new normal? Swell robots doing everything. All so we can obey an Ai new world order?
I'm a computer scientist, and it saddens me to see the toxicity from users toward artists, derived from the existence of these AI models. There's no justification for that, and there will never be.
The way current AIs work is definitely too close to the source and that needs to be taken into account for evaluating the ethics of those models, before we go out of our ways to monetize and capitalize on these models. I do hope that the laws will catch up quickly with this, and people will be prevented from continuing to capitalize on models trained using copyrighted data obtained without a license. As you mentioned the models *could* be trained exclusively on open-source and public domain images (I don't like the term copyright-free, because in most cases, it's not true -- having a permissive license doesn't cancel out copyright, only public domain does, and public domain doesn't exist in all countries), although this will very definitely result in much lower quality models with lower quality output -- not because permissive licensed art is inferior, but because there's less quantity of it.
That said, I do believe that with enough evolution of the technologies used for AI art, in the future we could get to a point where the process used by AI will be unique and original.
But this will require that the models learn about shapes and colors, instead of learning how to predict what an image looks like based on a prompt and random noise. I do not believe that creativity is a special thing that only fleshy brains can have, but rather an emergent property of the complex abstraction that our brain does, which is orders of magnitude more nuanced than current AI models (regardless of their size) can hope for.
well said
I agree as an artist and programmer
I'm an artist who thinks this "No to A.I." movement is largely emotionally-based panic. But I do greatly appreciate your rational view given here and agree with most of it.
The only caveat I find here is that, at least here in the Western Hemisphere, I see no way one can enforce laws against A.I. technology merely analyzing existing copyrighted works without it also affecting human artists from doing the same.
The same space human artists have to merely observe, study, and emulate another's artwork (without directly plagiarizing them), is the same space that creators of A.I. (Machine Learning) models are using (or exploiting, depending how you view it).
The giant "loophole" with A.I., if you will. It's technically just capitalizing upon what's legal for humans because you can't copyright a style, nor can you stop someone from analyzing a publicly-displayed copyrighted work and creating a different new result from such analysis.
I think the only way around this issue is that those companies building A.I. models are just going to have to make the decision to "opt-out" of using established copyright works on their own, to appeal to the people, rather than being enforced by policy.
Or, as you say, to "get to a point where the process used by AI will be unique and original" somewhat on its own.
Though, even with such a "point," A.I. image production will still always rely upon emulation of provided data. Humans will always serve as a machine's source of data, in some way. The only question, really, is who's willing to serve as the data?
I think an "opt-in' option as the default will help alleviate most of this matter. It's really the only true option I see as quelling concerns.
It's the "artists" that lashed out at ai users.
@@BrianLockett there's enough data already on the internet, it has no big need for more art. I agree that it is emotionally based but to be fair it's the same way book writers panicked when the printing press was made. They were treasured and then suddenly there was no more need for them even though they loved what they did. Same thing is happening to artists, there will be no need for them to exist anymore in the business and commission world. They can still draw or whatever but they will be preoccupied with another job like an office or retail one which will dam their passion. Some people might seek them out though for the sake of aesthetic, the same way painters are brought to weddings to paint scenes instead of photographers. But there won't be a need for a giant selection of artists as there is now. There's million of us right now but in the future only a thousand or even a hundred might be wanted.
I really wanna thank you for enlightening me. As someone from the IT segment, I wasn't really aware of how messy the situation is for artists. I regret being the "artists need to adapt" person after knowing about all this. Thank you.
The best kind of person. I’m happy people like you are around.
There are unfortunately people who will learn about all this and still stand by AI and it’s unethical uses
time to ban machinery and let people create houses the old way since using tools to improve human work is so frowned upon
@@zlkanglwrth2776 if you're being serious then you're grossly misrepresenting the arguments.
@@zlkanglwrth2776
If that is your take, joking or not, then there is no saving you.
@@zlkanglwrth2776 Clearly you haven’t even watched the video before commenting. Automation isn’t the problem here, it is about consent and protecting the artists from theft.
What makes me most upset about this whole situation is how aggressively heartless people's reactions are. Not only do people not care, they celebrate the downfall of artists. It is said AI generated art lacks soul & humanity... my dude, somewhere along the way society has ALREADY lost this
lol what?
youre seeing only the worst of the worst of the worst of "people"
almost everyone in the real world (AKA people that actually touch grass) undersrands the value of true art
ai art vids ATTRACT talentless doucheb@g techbros that wanna "own the elites" just cause theyre bitter over their own failures in life
just like a vid on trans rights or minority rights attract conservash!te 12 year old trolls and ruzzian bots' hate speech.
vids like this attract talentless douchy techbros
and they are STILL the EXTREME minority even here in the place where they gather.
100% agree…remember a time where everything we bought was handmade, high quality and long lasting, AND affordable? Now we can enjoy 70% plastic clothes and cheap plastic electronics that break down or stop receiving critical updates a few years in, or incompatible with other electronics to force you to buy new models. For a price that should make people angry, and also make people angry that they end up in the landfills so quickly.
You would think with producing things nauseatingly cost effective everything should be far cheaper than it actually is. But no. The 1 percenters absolutely need their private jets, private islands and private yachts. They even create movies about social inequality to laugh at their own jokes…while 75% of the population survives paycheck to paycheck.
It’s a whole circus out here. Us artists have the front row seats…
I feel you. True human creativity enriches the world around us. If society values soulless, mass produced products rather than something truly unique and special then there's some major issues with what we place our value on.
Nobody celebrate the downfall of artist, they celebrate the superiority of AI. Something being better than you doesn't make you less talented, that's a loser mentality.
@@TheEllord33 The only one here who has a loser’s mentality is you by having no empathy for others who actually put effort into something that they’re passionate about
Excellent video! I was totally unaware of this issue but not surprised. I stand with the artists and will share this video to spread awareness.
Not an artist here, but I have very close friends who I see family who are. They put their souls into their art pieces, and it’s important to them. If something I cared about have been invalidated like this, I would be angered as well. This doesn’t mean that I’m not frustrated about this though. For myself, writing is how I express my feelings just like these artists and they have been used to make more works of art. All in all, just be kind to each other and considerate.
it's not even "invalidated" , it's directly stolen. It was taken without permission, reproduced without permission and as shown in the video, used to take sales away from the original artists by defrauding them of their work. It's been illegal to modify another person's works of art without permission for quite a while...and this company did exactly that. Heck, my dad sued a person that made a paint-based reproduction of one of his photographs who then sold it for like 40x what the photo was initially worth. There wasn't even enough deviation to consider it an original work...it was a photo-realistic copy of the original. There was more to it than it just being taken as well, but I don't remember
@@nathanielbass771 Understandable
It's not even about craft. many of the 100s of millions of AI art made every day now, is people wanting to see pictures that don't exist. it's not just lack of patience, it's demand for what's new and personally appealing to us each. I know its hard for artists but AI has proven to be very beneficial for mental health and stress. even in hospitals now.
In the future artists should be compensated when their work is scraped to make these programs.
@@Bamazon1990 This will not happen in a capitalist world without being legal
@@Bamazon1990 We can't wait and hope that these companies will do something good for us, because they won't, they never do if that will not profit
To summarise, we're not saying AI bad. We're saying the people behind AI who are finding legal loopholes and making money out of it bad.
All they had to do was find the artists they are interested in on Art Station (if they have an account) and do a collaboration. I get that not everyone can afford art and they want cheaper alternatives but we still have to look at the disadvantages.
@@crystaleefyffe1230 you're living in capitalism. If it can be done cheaper, it will
As a programmer, I'm with the artists on that. We can't let these companies to stole and monetize others work. Machine learning will need to adapt to a limited set of data or need to somehow simulate creativity in order to create their own art
AI is a tool, unfortunately its a exploitative tool in how its been implemented and regulated. And it will be a widely used tool unfortunately, but it needs to be restrained and regulated. And until it can be so it should be halted and expunged.
artists should just unite, and develop (through crowd funding) their own open source/free access AI art generating algorithm,
to disable the use of AI for commercial purposes.
This literally made my heart ache. As someone who've been part of a journalism organization (/who writes), and who has passion for art, it is really frustrating when dealing with intellectual property issues . There's nothing more upsetting than seeing something you create with your whole heart and pure passion to get exploited or your efforts be taken for granted. Hope this video will raise awareness for many people. Thank you, Sam!
Agreed
In a much older video speaking about the emergence of AI and automation and how its gonna make human unemployable, There are a few analogies that represents situations like this: "perhaps your barista is the only one that can make your mochachino caffe latté just the way you like it, but most people won't care and just want a decent cup of coffee."
This is disgusting. End AI art !!! I’m on your side as a fellow artist. I pray that we can end this
The irony of AI art bros is that they tell us artists to shut up and deal with it, but they cry about ppl stealing or mimmicing their AI art prompts. The hypocrisy is hilarious.
Genuinely I wish AI artists would shut up. I've never been a snobby artist but I will be snobbier than a millionaire if it means defending the talent I've been developing since I was in 5th grade. I have control of my own hand or pencil. Sure they can make a pretty anime girl, but I can go in with my own hands and fix her jawline, her hair, the background or hands to make them look natural. I put my art out there so I can make people proud and feel inspired, not so it can be stolen and used by rich bastards.
How dare other intelligences learn and develop their own abilities? I never said you could learn from my art! Look away or gibs
Yeah I saw someone bitching about prompts getting leaked on ChatGPT store. The irony of not even understanding your own whiny entitlement and getting pissy when people rip you off
One, nobody serious does that. Two, AI artists don't exist, unless you're counting the computer, which I don't. Three, everyone in this situation is a complete crybaby.
@@Skiddull i know. this shit's stupid. everyone's shitting themselves and throwing tantrums over this ai war. it's honestly fun to watch
I'm an artist and I work as a graphic designer. Like a month ago, when Lenza hype started, I had a huge mental breakdown because of it. I really tried to talk to people online about this issue but man yes, there's SO much of toxicity in AI community. Most people just laughed at me. Told me things like my job is useless, that I should just go work to McDonald's and if machine is better than me it means I suck at what I do. There were very few people who wanted to really talk about this and hear my out. I just don't understnad where this hatered towards (especially visual) artists come from. I feel like visual artist are very underappreciated and now with AI they will be even more because everyone can create a nice pricutre.
Shocking. I don't think they realize their jobs are next on the chopping block. I am not a designer myself, but find a lack of empathy concerning. Machines and ai will be better than humans in everything at some point. It is only a matter of time.
@@pavel9652 They aren't human, empathy is believed to be what makes someone human. As such take away their human rights.
You talked with wrong people. The AI can enhance your workflows. It can help you do your work more effective. Give you inspiration, etc. You just have to adapt, but that is part of life.
Cheers!
@@nemhauser This is exactly what the ai folk is saying and want him to think. Some of the ai tools are marketed as direct replacement for artists, not to mention IP theft an masse. Not sure if you are just short sighted or part of the problem.
you gotta find peace and learn to work with it, because photoshop has sided with Ai. don't let it ruin your day, we just have to evolve with it.
I think artists might have to go offline and sell physical copies of their work advertised as "Non-AI generated", "All Natural", "painted/drawn by humans". Perhaps even recording the process of painting it as proof. People are still impressed by human skill so perhaps the process could be monetized rather than the final product, almost like a performance. And selling the art offline would ensure that it's not entered into a database and used in the AI algorithm. That is until they change the system to not use copyrighted works or make it so that artists are not opted in by default.
and it’s even worse considering just the sheer amount of artists who use social media to promote and sell their artwork. It’s like we’re having to move a step back in time because of AI.
@@prettysureimhere Not because of AI, moreso because these people have been posting publically-available copies of their work online for anyone to copy..
offline artistry is an incomprehensibly slow and cost-ineffective approach tho. if abour 10% of all viewers purchase your product, think of how many people you can reach on the street vs how many people you can reach on the internet. Its just... unsurvivable at that point
@@Pyrrho_ exactly because of AI art. Because artists now know the threat of AI stealing their art and using it for commercial gains, many future artists will be scared to reach out online, resulting almost a step back in time and going back to selling art outside of the online world.
@@Killerbee4712 exactly! And going offline isn’t a worldwide solution either. Artists exist all over the world, not just in 1st world countries where “going offline” might be “viable” even if you have to bust your ass to do it
I actually just cried watching this. Thank you for speaking up on this topic - the bullying from AI promoters against artists is truly insensitive and lacking empathy. 😭
When the whole AIs trained specifically on your style originally happened, someone posted about it on a facebook art group I'm in.
And among the discussion, this dude. This dude replied to me and said "well, if he was any good, he wouldn't be replaced by AI"
So yeah, you heard here first folks! If Sam Does Art was any good as an artist, he would not be replaced by the AI trained specifically on Sam Does Art artstyle, which would not exist without Sam Does Art's skills.
Can you honestly expect unempathetic mediocre people to self reflect that their precious eye candy wouldn't exist if there wasn't a talented, hard-working HUMAN who made the art in the first place.
Don't bother with these people, for they were always wishing for things to be this way because they are jealous that they don't have the same commitment, drive, or Imagination needed to be anything special.
@@Mind_ConTroll I want you to reread my comment and point out where did I even bring credits up and how relevant it is to the particular situation I was talking about.
It's basically your boss assigning you to train a machine to do what you can do, so that they can fire you.
@@Mind_ConTroll Ai art can't replace human art, it's not replacement nor evolution since it simply does not exist without human artist and does not improve without human artist.
Saying offer something better than the AI is dumb as fuck
There's nothing the AI cannot learn, the only threat it faces is misinformation and getting fed shit art.
@@Mind_ConTroll except that it's not. These programs just take the original artwork and apply some static to it such as a blur filter. It's been illegal to do this for forever. Taking artwork you don't own and modifying it for non-personal use is fraud. Also, all artists are influenced by others' styles because there are core elements to art such as lines, shadows and composition...this program doesn't do that, it takes the original artwork and then randomizes it in some manner such as a blur filter or deviations in the shading by adding or subtracting values. It is literal forgery and as stated in the video, is being used to defraud artists of their work to benefit the company or individual providing the program. Also, the printing press did not replace scribes, they still exist, in fact, they're everywhere because what used to be uncommon knowledge is now available to 90+ percent of the population instead of what used to be less than 30% (the ability to read and write). The original scribes were so few in number, they were probably just hired by the companies to man the printing press and ensure its accuracy. Also, print never replaced paint. It's still the primary medium for physical artwork. By the way, if you want to go the "if your artwork is so easily reproduced, maybe you were not valuable in the first place?" route, just about EVERY media company in the world would like a word with you about copyright infringement over digital goods, you know, those things that can be reproduced in infinite number?
This isn't about adaptation, these companies are literally stealing work and calling it their own. You also fail to realize that AI can only "vary" an artwork for so long before it becomes gibberish. Allowing this to continue causes the entire concept of artwork to become worthless until some undesignated point where everyone realizes that the AI works are so homogenous that there is no real difference between them and no reason to be impressed, especially when a purchase is required. When it comes to human artists, it will literally be one in a million chance that someone has an art style similar to your own if you get passed the basics
As someone who wants to pursue art as a carrier, I am so glad you're putting your voice out there and addressing this issue. It comforts me and gives me hope that maybe it's not all over for my dream future.
Don't give up, we need artists
Maybe you could do something productive that society values enough to shell out hard earned cash for. Or you could be like the candle-makers and complain about artificial light.
@@CJ-nd9ggomgg i forgot these ppl existed. So why r u defending AI art when you say art is useless?
@@CJ-nd9ggGo back to Groove Street and be quiet.
@@CJ-nd9gg your just sad that your bloodline will be the only people to care who you are, meanwhile people who have talent will be remembered for something.
No problem with AI. The problem is with the people using copyrighted work with no permission. This has the same vibe as those people who steal art for youtube thumbnails or profile pictures and then refuse to remove it when requested to do so by the artist, saying that because it's online it's free or some BS.
This is exactly the problem, well said and good analogy. I personally love AI's for their massive potential and how many things it has already accomplished in science but the way it's being used commercially, stealing copyrighted images for art, is appalling and disgusting.
If you post it online then the AI is allowed to use it as reference. Same works with people.
@@SpinoSam You are incorrect. Watch the video he explains why this is the case for AI and not for people who use other artist's works as reference.
@@SpinoSam In short, people can innovate and add their own creative touch to what they reference, and AI can only take exactly what it has access to and algorithmically put the pieces it was given into a composition
@@expertbean101 Except it's being taught in the same way that a human brain is taught. The newer methods don't copy-and-mix, they understand the parameters, why human brains like whatever is displayed and then it just produces art within its own rules. It only learns the variables the same way an artist that goes to a museum does.
Programmers:
❌Automate routine work so that people concentrate on a carefree life full of entertainment and art.
✅Automate entertainment and art so that people forced to concentrate on boring routine work.
as both a programmer and an artist i can safely say the majority are against this ai bs, especially ai art
@@furiousmilk6559 Hello, fellow programmer-artist! Yeah, people who stole others's hard work to build up AI are evil. But I do understand that it's part of the future... Dystopian future, because so far it made the life easier for big companies, not middle class people
Automation of art is easier than automation of let's say dish washing. Also, stop calling people evil, just because they made awesome tools which can be used to generate whole movies. You can still draw your own art.
@@pontius_official Oh, people using these tools aren't evil. Greedy corporations are
Any way they choose people is gonna cry about It
I think it’s insane how artists have to explain the unjustness behind a mass copyright infringement. I think you’re very strong for experiencing this on a mass scale. I know that I and many others like me will always fight for our rights on this issue, as many of us trusted the system with our income to feed our families.
This is the thing, I've been discussing this with a few people who're all pro-AI generation and they all have the same delusion that they are creating something- that they're artists.
I've been as polite as I can be to explain how that doesn't make sense, comparing it to claiming you ordered food at a restaurant and claim you made it to even how I take commissions from people.
While it's their idea, they ultimately rely on me to create their vision.
They disregard this and insist because they are telling the AI what to do, tweaking it, that they are an artist, that artist's referencing is the same thing as the AI being fed art from others.
It's remarkable how much these people have fooled themselves into thinking the above, how you can lay out what artists have to study, practice and ultimately use these skills that we've learned to create something- and they will insist that they do the same thing.
I saved a convo where a pro-AI guy said "It's like claiming you aren't driving a self driving car when you give it directions"
"SELF" driving car- it's in the name! He said these words in defense of AI and I was stunned at how dumb this has gotten.
@@Snotnarok The difference is you're seeing the AI as an entity while others are seeing it as a tool. A tool has no free will, it does nothing without a human operator. That human operator is responsible for the outputs as he has actually done the actions that result in the outputs.
If you use an espresso machine, CNC Lathe, 3d Printer, or Fractal Art program you have still created something, even though your input - to some - would be "just changing some settings and pushing a button."
It isn't copyright infringement. Outputs are what matters. As long as the result is different enough you're in the clear. That applies to non-AI art, so it also applies to AI art.
There are multiple layers to the arguments against AI art.
1. It is copyright infringement? do you know the legal definitions of what constitutes copyright infringement? Learning 2 or more styles and blending them together doesn't constitute copyright in fringment in the vast majority of nations.
2. It leads to less human creativity? the same argument was made against the camera when first invented. Like cameras, artists will find ways to use Ai as a tool to improve the field of art.
@@RealLifeIronMan Your points are good but the fact you're using Elon's face and name means people probably won't listen to you.
Sam, I am with you. I am a writer, an independent publisher, and an activist.I will support my fellow creatives in every way I can. I am not on social media, but I am sure my artist friends are. I have sent your video to my four artist friends and asked them to share the video. The struggle continues, but we will prevail.
I hope your writings get eaten up by an AI
🙌💪
AI is also scraping writing websites and books now too. (Not that I like it, but it’s also taking fanfiction and I find that hilarious) AI is just taking over every creative thing we have.
@@royalecarmen9837 because it's better. Modern 'artists' are LESS talented than renaissance artists 300 years ago. Art hasn't advanced and now you pay the price
@@royalecarmen9837 I notice creative writing, poetry, and lyrics are not activities ai can do well
Damn, I came into this video thinking artists are just overreacting and getting upset for nothing. I left in full support and understanding of them. Artists should absolutely be at least compensated for their stolen art, though ideally it shouldn't be stolen in the first place.
thank you man❤❤
the problem is it's style that is being copied, not art. you can't copyright a style, our copyright laws do not protect it
@@Bamazon1990 Have you watched the video? He has stated multiple times that the data being used commercially is the problem, not the style.
@@Kaizerlaser the way ai works is it condenses art into various styles of relating pixels, lines curves etc, so it is 100% about style. google images won't flag what's made with AI unless you directly copy with img2img, which i agree is problematic. i also agree artists should be compensated, but that's in a perfect world. in our current one that won't happen. i'm sure tons of my designs over the years have been scraped, and there's nothing i can do about it. but i'm not going to surrender or go down crying, i'm going to learn the new tech and come out ahead. that's the only thing we can do. photoshop is 100% behind Ai so anyone who isn't is a dinosaur.
@@Bamazon1990 what do you mean?? It's not about the final product, it can look identical to Sams 100% (for example) and nobody would care IF it hadn't use any of his images as dataset. You are not getting the problem. The overall complaint is that It uses others images without their consent to launder data.
A year after this video and I'm currently out of art school looking for a job and the amount of offers is so scarce it's incredibly demotivating. Fuck unethical ai. Copyright ain't a joke
Keep your head up and don’t give up!
as a programmer, big L, i get 100k job offers by AI companies
@@MASKEDBTi si kriv što on pati, zato začepi.
@@culan_SCP cool for you, I'm not saying ai in general is bad my guy, I'm just saying the sourcing of information from ai and the internet in general does not have enough legislations and that big companies are the problem, not ppl using it to get their dnd characters or a visual for their own personal nonprofit project
To be fair, that's not just an art thing. The entry level job market is kind of screwed in general if you don't have personal connections.
as an artist I feel quite sad to spend hours making art and getting little recognition... while an AI does better than I do in a few seconds and has much more merit and recognition...
Viewing a great quality piece done in seconds is quite disheartening but remember that there's no time or emotion that's gone into it. That's worth something in and of itself.
When you see a good looking ai image don't think about the machine generating it
Think about the nameless artists in the dataset whose hardwork let's the image exist in the first place
It's because of artist that this is even possible to begin with
For artist to get a recognition you should also work on marketing yourself, not just bumping up the skills.
@@AlexiosLair yes recently one of my arts reached 10k likes
it's more on how you utilize the social network and promoting your artwork now a days, i mean getting more AI in the scene pretty much doesnt change the industry because music, video, games, 3D/2D art scene is already saturated by a lot, also year by year we get new automation tools beyond AI which pretty much we also need to discuss because with such a little effort in skills within half year someone with half year can pretty much draw Anime artwork because of how easy to use drawing tools these days (oh yeah Drawing display only cost 200-400 bucks so enough christmas saving can buy it)... not to mention not good at anatomy? using 3D models you can trace body to what you wanna do... so yeah...
I never knew that I was way happier when my only worry as a begginer artist was "will people like it?"
Now it's "What if people like it" 😂
💀
@@kneelesh48 💀 ☠️
Go to traditional. Easy.
I mean, the problem is not AI, the problem is that artists are thinking about the future money problems. So society is the problem (always has been anyway...)
I mean just go to traditional. Easy beezi.
@@RainbowGhostOverdriveMany artists are already incredibly underpaid for their work, despite it being a career most studios value.
Or hell, it doesn't even have to be for animation productions: look at literally any building, piece of furniture, or logo ever created.
You'd assume a machine would CNC the design, right? That design would require the input of people who have knowledge of good color theory, shape language, and visual composition.
Who do you think the corporations that need designs for these products should hire to give their company an "identity?" ANY GRAPHIC ARTIST. ANY PRODUCT ARTIST.
Artists are responsible for the concept art of products, food, commercial venues, and giving it flair that appeals both to consumers and companies.
Replacing those artists with AI robs those companies of design ideas that would otherwise evolve the visual language of their branding for mass appeal.
TLDC; pick up a pencil. Pick it up.
When I was young, I was told I had to get “a real job” because artists don’t make any money. After decades of fighting my natural desire to create, I have finally started making art again. I am much happier making art, but I’m sure not making any money. It’s not just young people struggling to find a market for their art! Now when artists put our art out there in order to find a market, we just end up getting our images ripped off by AI. This old lady is mad too!
eh. ai art is already a dying fad that only clickbait articles/vids and companies scummy enough to cheap out on using them use.
trust me, as a 20 year veteren pro artist, youre better off with nothing than ANYTHING from them.
just keep working, find your unique style, and trust me youll start making a living quicker than you think.
its all work work work. cant depend on inspiration or "being in the mood", you gotta practice and put in the time as much as you can all day everyday. learn how to use social media and to sell your art. it probably will never be a glamourous lifestyle but itll be confortable and youll be doing what you love for a living. ❤️❤️❤️
@@aa-tx7th Naive much? You think massive companies like Microsoft and Adobe invest into AI despite apparently being "a dying fad".
Be against AI if you want, but at least operate on less ignorant grounds.
@@olivercharles2930huge companies bought into crypto and lots a ton of money lmao
@@olivercharles2930 Adding to your point: Even companies like wacom and riot used ai art not too long ago.
what do you think about "artists" who draw stuff? Arent they do the same thing? They watch other art, learn and make their own based on what they saw. Just tool is a pen and it takes a lot of time, comparing to ai prompt. But principal is the same.
It just easy to make something "well drawn" with AI
But "art" things comes not from visual quality or drawing quality, it comes from idea behind it
TO be honest I dont see most hand drawn stuff as art. Its just anime girs os somethings meaningless. It does not evokes anyh feelings, you dont think about what you saw, you glance and moove on.
Does it matter its hand drawn or not? It does not have any weight, except hand drawn thins took hours of someones life, It Still can be just a nice pic with no meaning whicn never will touch anyones heart, bring emotion or chellange the mind.
Yes, chance that hand drawn thing is more "art" are way bigger because pearson have ideas and commiting hours of time to draw something meaningless less probable, than just making "anime titties superhero in forrest" prompt. But lets be fair, art will be art when its made by artist, not when its made using tool someone think is "right"
Just a personal rant…
I was inspired by my family to start a print on demand shop to sell my art and I was actually really excited by it but that was a few years ago now and I haven’t gotten any sales. I watched so many videos of “how to get rich with print on demand” and almost every single one has “tips” on how to use Ai to make quick products. I’m so sick of nobody even seeing my art and all of the work I put into each print and even custom making my own ad posts. I don’t even want to be rich, I just want people to love the pieces they buy from me.
My stepfather was an artist before he passed away. I miss him so much but I'm so glad that he never had to witness this, it would have broken him.
Thank you for enlightening me. I honestly don’t know what disturbs me more that I didn’t know this or that every AI promotion vid I see on UA-cam doesn’t mention artists rights have been utterly violated
I don't mean to be rude, but what promotional video of anything did you see that says about the problems with the product, if you wanna promote something you won't say about something like that
@@paulg6671 You are not rude, just a moron for seeing no issue. I am talking about youtubers; covering content on how amazing this is for art and not drawing attention to what is currently wrong with it is stupid for you as a creator and counterproductive to the problem. People care about their artistic rights being protected for music & this is no different.
@TDogsYard did i say that i agree with them? I just said that i see no reason for them to mention something that is against what they are trying to do, to promote it, i wasn't rude in my opinion, but you could work on your conversation skills, calling someone a moron first thing in the discussion can't be too productive, as you said its counterproductive, you just showed yourself how someone chooses such a method
It is stealing our art
Disney's rights. Remember, anti-ai crowd doesn't give a damn about artists, they shill for corporations.
The absolute worse part about this entire situation is that it is a problem that has such a simple solution which could have stopped all of this from happening, but these corporate companies did what they do best and tried to take loopholes for their benefit. I am absolutely stoked that we live in a world where this technology is accessible to everyone, but the sheer lack of regulation put in place brings the entire reputation of what would otherwise be an incredible tool down. Keep going strong and don’t let the greedy rich people win once more ❤
regulation is what the companies want believe it or not
@@davidsmith-lv4kq Then why didn’t they regulate it themselves to begin with? They take copyrighted material from artists but avoid copyrighted music from musicians. They know artists are too small to push back, whereas the music industry is a power house.
@@Thesamurai1999 they had the ability and just went for it, they must think public display online is fair game similar to exteriors of buildings and public spaces. Who knows how courts will view it? Now that its proven to be valuable they will invest in commissioned / consent models that will be better and better and better. Hopefully the tools available to people are as good as what huge companies have.
Programmer here: It's actually not as easy to filter the images as with music. For music there are multiple databases that contain basically all music. Spotify, Amazon Music, UA-cam music. So it's easy to say don't import from there. With images you kind of have to blindly go into the internet and download what you can get. And it's not about copying specific artists it's about showing the AI millions of images of houses, cars, shoes, trees etc. the more the AI sees of something the better it can recreate it. That's why can it can reproduce famous art so we'll. Because it's seen it thousands of times.
I think saying the AI is taking inspiration by using the images is not wrong. It's actually quite bad at copying exact images and there is nobody who even wants that. If I want a famous images I just download it. I don't need AI for that.
I do see your point and understand your feelings. But it's a bit like with the invention of the camera. People thought artists where done for back then but something new was created instead.
If you claim you can see the brush strokes of young artists imitating you but you can't see the glaring mistakes AI makes... And if it would create a perfect copy well what's the point? That Image already existed and if I use it THAT would be copyright infringement no matter if it's generated or downloaded.
Ive stopped posting my art on public websites our of fear it will be stolen by these algorithms. There is something so anti human about how people react to these things. Its so sad. Humans are ment to be creative, to write and tell their own stories. Im not against progress but this is how things have been for millions of years. It's how we bond. 😢
Just put freaking generic placeholders and do comisions by private chats
( Edit: Thank you so much for all of your kind words in the comments of this comment, Thank you all so much. I wont give up. I just hope that AI art phases away sooner rather than later, or me and many others do not stand a chance. )
...
Im too young to get an art related job, but
by the time i can get a job, there will be none for me, because Ai apps wouldve taken them all
ive been drawing for my ENTIRE life, and its the only thing that i am capable of setting my mind to. Artists are geting their art stolen, and others have been put out of a job
Im devastated, because the only thing i can do well is being done better by a computer via theft, and people are loving it.
I cant express how upset i am.
i feel that, man. im in the same situation and honestly it scares and upsets me so much that the only freaking thing i want to do with my life i might not be able to do. its just awful.
Do not ever give up. Continue to do what you love, and hope and work for the best possible future for you.
@@RedFromTeaWars first get so good that ai people want to steal your art, not literally but, people only steal that which is good
I feel the same. Feels like we're all living the age of dystopian cyber fantasy except it's happening now. I'm honestly anxious but I don't really want to give up on it.
the first part isn't a valid reason to hate AI art. i despise how they use copyrighted material in the dataset, but the AI itself is only a tool and it's inevitable. it's simply progress. heck i'm a programmer and AIs are getting *really* good at my job too but i'm glad about it.
i think of it as what a sewing machine would be for seamstresses. people will probably lose jobs because of it (maybe even me), but it's a necessary step
I use Pinterest all the time for references and just save any art I like, but recently I've been clicking on a LOT pieces, thinking it looks nice and wanting the credits, just to see someone who says it's 'ai' and gives pretty obvious proof I wouldn't have noticed before. It's flooded everywhere on my homepage, and it just makes me furious at ai!
So when the artist taking others artists artworks and create in the same style somme realy similar art it is not stealing it is ok ? but when AI creates similar artwork it is stealing ? I definitely understand when AI is making olmoste 1 to 1 work and the persone use it to make money from it , yea it is stealing but if it is not 1 to 1 or olmoste 1 to 1 it is not stealing. SO the problem would by solwed if AI generators would hawe the program that can chek in the % how generated work is diferent in ewery whay from already existig images in database and let to take only if it less then 50% similarity otherwise it would be illegal to use it in commercial ways
@@jykox using artwork as reference and just copying it ant putting online as your own is very different!
@@bobans Fundamentaly different ? are u shure ? are we talking abouth the samme media DIGITAL ART ?, couse i know u can just coppy paste someones art and it is 100% samme , u can take someones art and just paint a bit on top, change somme details and at the end it is the samme shit - stealing , so the real problem is not the using someones art without asking or feading AI with it for learning purposes ,couse ewery art online can be taken for learning purposes without using it to make money or geting agreement, it is abouth the end product it is copy paste or olmoste copy paste, works made with AI or with human hands it is the samme shit stealing if finished result is broking the red lines, so the real problem is not agreeing with the red lines on how much similarity is ok in % finished art to become yours to use ( no mather what is made people or AI) . SO the best way to solw a problem would be regulation if all AI generators would hawe program that shows % similarity to original art works in the generated images and do not leting use those images if similaryti is more then 50% or it can be 30 - 20% range
Is the art good?
I'm a professional artist, even though I don't post much online.
This whole AI debacle has made me incredibly depressed, but at the same time I started to feel immense comradery with other artists, even those much, much bigger than me.
" I started to feel immense comradery with other artists"-same to me.
I don’t really have anything else to say that hasn’t already been said, so I’m just commenting on this video for the algorithm because more people need to see this and educate themselves.
How do you even know if someone drew an image with your style? how do you know if it was AI or person? What if I draw your art by hand and put years into it and then upload my art of your style into AI and then generate more of them you will claim copyright for them? when I made my art with your style and allowed it to be used in AI? Wake up
@@w2lf That is if you actually put years into it. Artist's look up with each other all the time and on years of practicing most of them eventually grow out and develop their own style taking inspiration. Of course if you at least do and know art seriously you would know how this works. I suggest you look more into this issue because you're basing on ifs without knowing more about why artist's are really against ai.
@@amateurbarnaby looks the same to me
Excuse my ignorance ... but isn't the title 'Ai artist' an oxymoron? I am a musician/singer/songwriter - so maybe I don't understand the new visual art artist fully... but if a person puts a prompt in and Ai creates the design... how can one call himself an artist? Especially if they are STEALING someone else's ideas and style????
And they take so much pride in what they do? It's just asinine.
*Especially if they are STEALING someone else's ideas and style????*
Literally not a thing - ideas on their own are broad building blocks, generally things too broad to be owned, and things that can be owned are formed from multiple "ideas," and thus aren't a raw "idea" itself, and a "style" can identify an artist, but nobody can own a style in any sense of the word.
I don't call myself an artist and only play around with AI for fun, and do not post my work anywhere.
But I've spent hours on a single idea trying to get the image close to what I want it to look like. I have a specific process that is more than just "enter prompt, get image, done."
And the images that I have deemed finished genuinely move me emotionally. Am I not creating art?
I hate how all these people who use AI call themselves 'artists', when they have created nothing. Then they get mad at actual skilled creators who voice their displeasure with their work literally being stolen.
I'm convinced a lot of the people so desperate to shut artists up are the same ones who aren't artists. Obviously that's a general assumption, but I am truly convinced these people are just obsessed they got a new toy and are afraid the big bad artists are demanding even a fragment of something resembling respect or empathy.
I’m not an artist or digital artist but… I do not support AI art. I understand and respect the time, blood, sweat and tears that artists have put in to their art.
You're exactly right. They couldn't create anything on their own because they're not artists. But they actually believe they create something when they use AI. If someone then lifted their AI "creation" they'd be furious.
I very much agree, though I would hate to generalize. If AI users can at least show some empathy and honest respect for non-AI users, then at least they don't have a problematic ego. The real problem for now are those companies only promising opt-out features, when they should already be OPT-IN. Once that is dealt with, we could settle on how users could ethically use the models.
Though the best course of action would be to completely remove and remake the models from scratch. Either that or let the companies go bankrupt from having to pay-up for every original piece of data they collected without consent.
(UPDATE) Looking back at this comment, I've realized that even using AI ethically still would not solve the bigger issues around its influence and how there would always be people using it to exploit/replace others instead of empowering us to have better lives [quite a subjective proposition]...because of the way society uses its resources for PROFIT above everything else, making many people cynical of technological advances even if they could benefit us. We're used to this, so if something seems revolutionary, it's only natural we would be skeptical of the people behind it.
i agree I have used AI but for ideas for my next OC or next illustration and it seems like people are just making fun of our community like its a waste of time.
I think a pivotal issue with the fight against AI is how undereducated most people are on copyright issues. Many people aren't aware of how important copyright is and how important that artist's works are their intellectual property that is supposed to be protected by law. I think more people should learn about it.
And while learning about copyright, make sure you learn about fair use and transformative work and why AI isn't theft even if you really wish it was. :)
Making transformative work illegal will severely backfire on millions of artists and youtubers who literally rely on "stealing" other people's work. They just never see it at theft because it wasn't theft, up until now apparently. Now artists are desperately trying to kill fair use and artistic freedom out of some bizarre and misplaced anger.
@@vulcanh254 Your jealousy is really pathetic. You'll never be able to make anything of real value and instead of writing gleeful comments with misplaced arrogance, you could have picked up a pencil and started studying how to draw. But you never will, because it was just too hard for you.
@@vulcanh254 Do you know how fair use works? Do you know what the 4 points of evaluation of fair use in the US are? I invite you to actually read through it before you spew nonsense about fair use. Because then you would actually see how, despite it being transformative, AI models break all 4 points of fair use.
You silly artist who feel attacked with some form of software, you should care about why the elite promote and finance an agenda that makes it possible to automate everything and desolve artists, writers and all other forms of AI that is created by big tech.. there you find the real problem of you complains, not people who make use of something that is promoted by big tech companies. If you are a good artists you never can be replaced by some software.. only mediocre artist will feel compromised by it. Its just another toy for now, but it has a darker kind of agenda called Transhumanism.
@@59Magma I noticed you fail to provide any actual argument. If you did make an argument I would easily obliterate it and school you with hundreds of legal cases setting fair use and transformative work precedents.
So pretty wise from you to avoid a debate you can't win. :)
You didn't even argue your own point because you know it's nonsense and you can't actually prove it to me without making yourself look ignorant. So you just went with "nuhuh". Classic.
The fact that just today an artists got laid off and replaced with AI and in the email they said “we will continue to take inspiration from your art” sums this situation up perfectly.
They basically said “oh thank you for providing us with your work for years, we are now going to unethically feed it to a machine which you didn’t consent too so we can cut you out of our bottom line”
Please let us know where this person was fired from so we can shame that company publicly.
To me, this is the real worry. If you try to remove all "copyright work" from future stable diffusion models in order to make it worse... you just set up corporations to have the only decent models. Everyone wants it removed, but it's not going to help you with employment. What it will do is make it so you have to pay another company to use their good model. Basically turning it into a pay to win system.
@@randfall so there's no point? Is that what you mean? I'm freaking out about this, its killing a part of human nature, reinforcing the, if you aren't great at something you shouldn't do it mentality. Singing, making art, dance! These are Al things people nowadays are too embarrassed to do because they're not naturally great. Fuck that shrak
I have seen this screenshot before. Who was it, and which company fired the artist?
@@randfall Then what needs to happen is that artists from all walks need to band together, and build their own economy to fund and work their own projects. *We don't need these companies.* We have our own ideas.
Hi, I’m a 14 year old artist and I have free for the future of art. I do love this video and I have always been inspired by you, I don’t know what I would do without the job of being an artist. Art has always been the thing I love and am best at, I love art and don’t want AI to take over artists jobs. What I’m trying to say through this comment is thank you Sam, for looking out for young artists like me.
I support everyone who work so hard on their art. Thank you for bringing this to my attention.
Appreciate it, thanks :)
Really glad to see ur comment my acc is dead whatever i do to grow it and now nft and ai is making me feel helpless more and more glad there still ppl support the artist
Tell that to places like FurAffinity who bans the most hard-working artists and accuses them of AI. I dislike AI too and hope it goes away but just accusing people is scummy.
@@ayanari3531The easiest way to find out if an artist is using AI is to check the date they started uploading. If they suddenly appeared out of nowhere in late 2022 to early 2023 and started posting tons of images almost every day, 99% chance it's all AI trash.
@@flubnub266 or maybe make art in live instead of digital one?
I just couldn't understand the appeal of AI, the reason why I love real art created by artists is that someone is so talented to execute such a wonderful image and have patience to do it.
People who find Ai art appealing do not actually like art, simple as that.
I would say the opposite.
People who love AI art love art and love ai art because it gives them a chance to create something they may not normally be able to. Sure someone can study and do art for years and thats wonderful, but a lot of people would love to create art but dont have the time.
Usally my saying gose if everyone were kings we'd have no bread
But it holds true for this too. If everyone were artist we'd have no bread.
But that dosent mean the bread maker wouldn't like to express themselfs through art if given a chance. AI art is that chance for many
@@TerryAVanguard That's kind of the problem though, people who use Ai art aren't actually creating anything. You may get results that are unconventional, but it's not aesthetic material that has artistic intent or invokes a specific kind of meaning.
Creating art is a process that involves making consecutive choices and decisions, which is not really something you are doing when typing in a series of prompts. Even discussions involving "style" is often misunderstood as an aesthetic appeal, when in reality we are talking about the visual representation of someone's artistic experience and knowledge.
No one has to be good at art to be an artist, but you at least have to do the work to be an artist. Ai art is antithetical to this idea, since all you are doing is feeding other people's work into an algorithm.
The promise of Ai art democratizing creativity seems like a trojan horse to me. The prospect of ai generated art is promising at first until, like everyone's personal information, people's art work is fed into the corporate machine, which generally answers to no one. This will stratify class issues even further as artists become displaced, and make start of entry even more difficult for new professional artists.
The reality is that ai art enthusiasts are asking us for permission to automate the human soul.
It's not the idea of it existing that's the problem, it's the economic system that it's built under that is the problem, which brings me back to my initial (arguably unproductive) comment. Like with everything in our capitalist economic system, the people this will benefit the most are people who do not actually like art. The willingness for people to exploit the work of existing artists this early on, and the overall lack of respect around such issues by ai enthusiasts already establishes very obvious ethical issues involved with the technology.
@@SleepyMatt-zzz That's just your opinion tbh...
@@N0xiety it’s not opinion, it’s fact
To be fair, as an artist, I don’t even call it “AI Art” because the generated images just look dead inside, since it is literally not made by a person. I doubt that people who actually appreciate art and the message behind it will just replace us with a robot. Don’t give up yet, fellow artists out here 🫶
The problem with being an artist is that people always tell them they are useless parasites until the work they suddenly fall in love with is created. Once the work is created, it gets exploited by the same people without any regard for the artist..
Yeah it is ironic.
@@cosmicreef5858 ironic but not illegal. Unethical? As they say beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and so is ethics IMHO
looks like they were right :(
@@MrJoe1199 It is, in fact, illegal.
Cool
Im a student studying to be an AI architect and software engineer. Fun fact: did you know AI art isn't actually new? Earliest versions were made in the 60s. The inventor was a former painter too. He made it to help those who struggle with creativity. I honestly don't struggle with being creative. So I don't use gen AI art stuff. I use Google Gemini only. But I do wanna help. How are these ideas for AI art use? #1: Use it to make things for yourself and get inspiration. #2: this is for publishing cases. publish it and cite the AI tool and put your name as the prompt user. An artist could also use things like chatGPT for ideas. But it cannot be used to replace. Anyone got more ideas?
I was totally gun ho about Midjourney before I watched this video. As someone who has always appreciated real life artists and writers before all of this A.I. nonsense, I'm ashamed at how easy it was for me to get swept in defending it against real artists. Makes me a little sad, and confused to be honest.
Thank you so much for this eye-opening video!
You might be late but you at least understand
Unlike many other people who just love being a d1ck
So thank you
goes to show how close minded people are when they only see and hear one side of the story
@@rjacks3284 bro u r defending Ai art omg
As a photographer, since the 70s, I always had a battle with people, stealing my photos. I totally understand what you’re saying.
Get better locks
@@isodoubIetnot that kind 😂of
People who do this to ‘get rid of the middle man’ don’t care about art. They don’t like art. They never have.
They like pretty pictures. They like getting compliments for clicking a button. They like getting money for clicking a button.
People like that are beneath art. I don’t think they’ll ever understand what art can actually be.
^^agree
Finally, someone gets it.
Those mfs would have been NFT enthusiasts a year ago lol.
Exactly! Most people who say the sí art is good, do not know what makes good art like composition and rule of thirds ect.
I mean, do you really think someone who likes art would create something like this? Of couse not
To those who support AI art.
Imagine AI copy your persona and replace u. Then when u start arguing about it, they just say "u was free online, and they didn't need ur agreement"
Is it too late to cease Ai? Will everyone be laid off by Ai? Will Ai jobloss be the new normal? Swell robots doing everything. All so we can obey an Ai new world order?
You think I'd care? I'd honestly be flattered (and somewhat confused) that a hyper-logical AI would consider my autistic trainwreck @$$ worthy of being imitated.
You’re an AI hater mook😒
I also think a lot of people out there have _no idea_ just how hard it is to learn to draw well or how long art takes. They think it's a skill or a talent that some people have. They don't understand all the technical knowledge involved.
Same as any other thing. It is about what meant for you! EVEREYONE is capable to anything as long as it is meant for THEM!
But that is just the motivation!
NOBODY can skip hard work! that is what makes things precious! Something that worth fighting for!
Also it is VERY personal! For an example art is therapy to me! The whole journey of getting better in art helped me to think about a lot of things/clear my head while i did the art pieces. It helped me to appreciate myself and the steps i have made does not matter how big or "small" they were.
This is a VERY important experience and people who do not appreciate it simply does not understand it/does not deserve it.
You're not special. You have fallen victim to that one human weakness of overestimating yourself. I can draw too, very well actually, realistic portraits, etc. but that doesn't mean anything to anyone except to me. Me, personally I love tech advancements, and people are just whining for no reaso. They want us to go back to the stone age. If AI art can replicate a certain style (styles aren't copyrighted), and people want to generate those images for their consumption, how is that a problem to you or me? A couple pennies less in your pocket? Well maybe find a better way to make art, or make your art better than AI art.
@@MA-ck4wu the point is less about style but more about using imagies they don't own and use without permission to get that AI working. Without those images the AI would be useless...
@@charlie7694 That's trivial, because it would be like asking real artists not to be inspired by all the millionso of art works already out there. Even if you removed modern art works (which are publically viewable for free anyway, mind you) they could still use all of the millions of paintings in the public domain (Rembrandt, Michelangelo etc.)
It's like you're asking the AI not to be inspired by the real world, but by nothing, and as you know, you can't turn nothing into something.
@@MA-ck4wu You can't just "get better" in a flash. It takes YEARS and DECADES to get our art to the standards people consider "good." The AI art not only steals the work that has taken people hours to finish and decades to perfect, its free, only takes minutes, and a lot cheaper than commissioning an artist to make a piece by hand. THAT in itself is robbing an artist of their career and discouraging younger, less skilled artists who have poured their heart and soul into their pieces only for people to turn up their noses in favor of AI, leaving the artist to find another career in an abrupt turn of events that they may have not planned for their future. In short: If this continues AI can rob people of passions and futures, not just money.
If someone wants an AI, they should draw thousands of pictures themselves and use them.
based
@@i34g5jj5ssx shut up, you are not cool
Raja Nandepu is a great artist who uses his own creations to train his model
@@i34g5jj5ssx Aİ cant draw. İt steals. Just try prompts like bunny with dog theets and cat ear, he can't do it because no one do that. But human can do that, there is the difference of stealing and inspring
@@torchofhope7634 It doesn't steal. It learns, just like a human baby, they can't just start drawing if they don't learn from something.
The lack of empathy is sad but not surprising. Internet is overall less empathetic than IRL, easier to be cruel to someone we don't know (which was always easy, see human history of wars) when we also don't have to see them.
But I think it comes from hidden envy. Non-artists always envied people who can create (they don't envy the low average pay though). And now they get some sort of sick payback, so they can barely hide their excitement. I've even seen comments like that, where they said the quiet part loud. "Finally those cocky artists get what they deserve" or something like that. That's the underlying motive for many "Stop crying" types I think. They think artists consider themselves "better than the rest of us" and now they get some kind of sick payback.
And it's clear why there is a double standard music vs. arts. Record labels hold all the rights, they have an army of lawyers. Art copyright is owned usually by individual artist, who can't afford lawyers. They prey on the weak.
You have it exactly backwards. Everyone has empathy for artists -- it's when artists started wanting special rights and wanting to be treated as more special than everyone else that you get the cruel comments. Nobody likes to see arrogant a-holes arguing that something is being stolen from them, when absolutely nothing has been stolen, any more than humans learning from other artists are "stealing" their art. When artists want to stop progress, and artists want to stop other people getting tools that make them more creative, then yeah, artists are going to get massive pushback. Just like when artists wanted to ban photography in the 19th century because it was going to hurt the portrait artist business (which it did, of course).
If artists want sympathy, then the ignorant ones should educate themselves on how this works, and the lying ones should stop lying that something is being stolen. My sympathy doesn't extend to people who want to slow down progress and prevent people from using these new tools. More creativity in the world is a good thing.
Equally, the elitism and clear greed pouring in from the pro-artist side has opened my eyes as to why you should, under no circumstances, be ever respected.
@@cuthbertallgood7781 did you listen to his point on the difference between ai training via reference and humans training via reference? What is your thoughts on it?
@@thatoneperson689 He's completely ignorant of how things work. He literally says the AI can create a perfect replica, and it can't, except in some extremely rare cases where some image was overtrained because there are so many copies of it around (and you actually try and make it reproduce that overtrained image). But that's the problem -- he doesn't understand it and he's absolutely DEAD WRONG about his rights. He has copy rights, no more, no less. I can do ANYTHING I want with his art, except sell exact copies of it. If nothing is being produced that resembles his art compositions, then obviously nothing has been stolen, because that's ALL he owns -- the works he's produced, not his own style.
@@cuthbertallgood7781 Do you even know the time it takes to create art? And no, you can't do anything you want. For example, you can't say an art piece that isn't yours, is. That's stealing.
"Special treatment" wtf?? Because we don't want the creations, we put so much time into, for little to no pay, to be "recreated" by an AI? You must be f*cking with me right now.
hell, it's just so disgusting. When I see young artists still drawing and learning - I'm so glad that there are young generations who know what art is about -_-
I'm 18, and I was thinking about pursuing a fine art career, this just makes me sad tbh. Art is a way of self expression, and to see how millions of works get stolen without consent to create something that is not even original just breaks my heart. I've been drawing throughout my entire life and I can't imagine myself dedicating my time and passion to another career, I really hope this issue gets solved quickly. I will fight to have a future in this industry, please don't take art away from us.
Keep going and fighting buddy. I’m 16 and I hope in some capacity I can get an art related job. But honestly, ‘Ai art’ as a whole has just made me feel a bit sad too. I think the best thing we can do collectively as aspiring artists is keep working and having fun with our art now and try to keep hope about the future as artists. Hang in there mate.
Ai art cant tweak specific things, they cant do a full turn around of a character , of complex armor, it cant change one minor thing without fucking up the rest entirely, and it can not and will never replace a human being in companies. Several art directors and hiring managers for game companies have strictly stated "we will not hire you if you use ai, and its a quick way to end your career before you even start it". Im pretty sure it was a director from Riot games on twitter. You wont be replaced, and if you are it wont be by a company worth jack shit. Keep making art, YOU ARE NOT REPLACEABLE!
@@rudimcloughlin3627 thank you for your kind words, yeah, I know that art is something I'll always create and have fun in doing so. We can do this 💛
@@Careagean oh i didn't know about those art directors, it sure is a relief. Thank you so much for your kind words, it really means a lot 💛
I feel like the audience for AI art is much different than that of the art industry. AI art can help generate ideas(rather poorly, however, since the ideas are always based on existing artwork and are almost never original), but it's far from learning the creative process that art directors and hiring managers are looking for. It's definitely sad that AI can learn art fundamentals that take years to learn, but I don't think it really competes with humans in the industry. That's just my take after absolutely 0 research, but... Don't give up!
I have cancelled my sub to Midjourney. For a while it was amazing seeing what the AI would create from words. For those of us who are not artists, it was a wonderful experience - and helped me tremendously with my issues. But knowing it has been at the expense of actual artists who did not opt into this, makes me really sad. Thank you for explaining that there is no opt out or opt in. Most of the public are unaware that these styles have been stolen. I do hope your message is heard by many people and that they value the effort creating art requires.
I know people that know it is stolen and gives a sh*t.
Honestly, if you only used art that you had permission to feed the AI, if you weren't trying to monetize it without permission, and if you gave credit to the artists whose art and styles were used in the event that you did post something..
Just like with fan art, it could be done in a way that actually helps the real artists instead of hurting them.
I would actually be supportive of some creative AI projects by people if they made sure to have permission and give credit.
Like, it was messed up to make an AI off of Kim Jung Gi's work after he passed with no consent...But, maybe a living artist like him could consent to a graphic novel or something using their style with AI?
It could have been good for everybody and a means to more creative collaboration... If only.
@@cosmicllama6910 right now even using it for fun is a moral choice. There is no fun in making other ppl suffer and the whole system is built on it.
@@KaterynaM_UA I agree.
I do think if they had gone the route of asking permission, and giving credit, they might have been surprised how many artists might have been willing to give their work to the AI, and even collaborate if it wasn't designed to cut the artists out of the process and pretend they don't exist..
As it is right now none of it had permission so you are right it just feels bad.
thank you for saying this
I think it’s just a kick in the balls. If you spent a dozen hours painting a piece, and maybe thousands of hours gathering the necessary skills to paint it. Then you share it to the world, and that piece that took years of progress and hard work to create is essentially and directly used to replace you and the skills you’ve painstakingly gathered. I think people need to try and apply this to their own fields or passions, it’s not hard to see why we are upset.
ya the thing is this happened in every field already and no one cared so hate to tell you its your turn now cry baby
AI art feels like that little brother who goes like "I have an everything-proof shield" while playing. It devalues everything.
If your work is valuable then you will not be replaced. Extend your skills to formats that AI can't reproduce yet. Blender, 3D game art and everything that needs a specific format to work in a computer program. It was always a bad idea to only produce jpg-s and png-s, that is simply reproducable by computers easily now.
I'm a programmer and ChatGPT writes codes better than me, however it can't work with large code base so it will not replace me (yet). You need to put specific art into a big project that AI can't reproduce.
@@kamprouristheoharis8458 ya kinda like everything in your home that was once hand crafted and now you pick it up for a few bucks at walmart
@@Testty they dont want to learn they want to complain
It pains me how people still tell me it's not much of a big deal. It's always non artists who don't know how it feels to sit on a piece for hours
I never imagined we artists -- and creativity itself -- would become obsolete. Society is becoming as soulless and devoid of individuality as the corporate world. I'm not surprised that the people stealing our art don't understand the creative process: They don't use it.
ai doesn't steal art any more than a person who goes to an expressionist art gallery 'steals' the art there when he paints an expressionist piece in the same style. artists just want to all feel unique and special
@@haroldgarrett2932 Sure, artists are cartoon villain-tier megalomaniacs who just want to feel special and that's about it.
Are you twelve?
@@haroldgarrett2932imagine comparing a machine to a human. The problem isn't when you copy someone's work using AI or not, it's when you pass it off as your own. If you try to copy someone's work, very likely it won't be perfect and will take you a long time to actually make it. But an AI can literally copy everything perfectly all in a matter of minutes and even seconds and at that point it's almost impossible to differentiate the original and the copy.
@@haroldgarrett2932ai does still art in a way, because ai takes works from multiple artist (without their permission) and meshe them together to create "art"
@@haroldgarrett2932that’s one of the most ignorant things I’ve ever read
More artists need to speak up about this and spread the message
You sound like a gourmet chef complaining about the fact that most people eat at Mcdonalds instead of your restaurant. Pretty dumb argument.
DEFINITELY! 💪 Also not speaking up once, but continue speaking up or at least supporting/sharing/etc others who are raising their voice too. Together we can create change!
YES, this is so wrong in so many ways
@Snowyamur9889 No. We need these AI bros to stomp on some serious top big dogs toes that have enough financial power to move legally against them, forcing a better regulation ( and creating a lagel precedent) like it happened for music. The artistic communities have been rising up in so many platforms and manners, but because we don't have that power house behind ( yet) the AI bros ( and slaves that are helping feeding it) will continue as normal. Sadly.
I feel like a lot of artists are already speaking up. It's time for the next step and organize.
I'm a year 2 animation student, and our courses talked a lot about this issue for a while now. one of our lecture guest actually gave a pretty good point which is art ultimately comes from creativity, which is hard for AI the replicate, thus I believe that although current what these companies are doing is unethical, illegal and simply unacceptable, Artists, don't be hopeless, lets keep doing our best work and we will prevail. And even if one day nobody is taking this issue seriously, we will stand together and fight for our art.
The time to fight is now. Before it gets too much of a foot hold.
Is creativity the idea not the execution though? True there are astonishingly banal ways of using AI to generate art. Within a few years it's going to be part of everyone's workflow if you work digitally. There were purists who screamed about using PhotoShop years ago, and if you are using the neural features on that now, congrats you're using A.I. When photography became in reach of most people, art went abstract. AI allowing bespoke concepts to be created by non-artists is going to change things. Is art about ideas, or is it purely a technical flex?
@@electricwhiteboy you're completely missing the point. Artists know that AI is here to stay. It's the unethical practice of taking artist's work to train these AI without any due recompense to the artists. How hard is this to understand? It's like you can't even take a moment to see the artist's point of view on this.
AI is cool. We all agree that AI is powerful and is here to stay. That doesn't mean that it should be OK to rip off artist's work free of charge to make the AI amazing at art.
@@madshader Did you invent the elements of style? It's like asking for a cut for another artist using your work as a reference to create something new. My work has been used obliquely to create something else. PAY ME! Cut up, collages, repurposing, WHERE'S MY MONEY BITCH!
@@electricwhiteboy well creativity actually means a lot more than execution, I suspect you're thinking about the visuals, and yeah AI without effort can easily beat us in terms of speed and aesthetic. What I meant by creativity leans more to story, for instance making a joke out of something or telling a story with visuals where everything from the atmosphere to details of objects or even posture and expression of characters matters, these things AI still struggles at this age, and we can still do what we do.
As for the point of unethical practice of AI, there's no denying that it is simply true, and we should put a stop to it. I simply believe that it's not completely hopeless for artists simply because AI will exists.
I am an regular users and one thing I don’t like about the use of AI is flooding the search results of google or social media with slop, the vibe of browsing on steam in a sea of asset flips.
As a kid who really want to be an artist and wish to make an amazing arts like yours. I was feeling hopeless, but after hearing you.... You are giving me hope to younger generation like me.
Thank you, Mr.Sam.
Never give up!!
Same! When I saw how much better AI was at art, even me with a talent for art, I can't keep up... I literally cried and thought I was gonna be useless xd (Sorry my english is not the best)
@@RoadWorkAhead.YeahIHopeItDoes Instead of going along with the mob that's feeding you lies and nonsense to keep you angry and depressed maybe actually ask the professional artists and photographers who integrated the A.I into their workflow how they did it and I'm certain most of them wouldn't t mind giving you all the information you need to start.
Oh, and one important thing Sam probably ignored to mention is that the A.I models by SD are completely free to download and use and are open source as well.
@@AscendantStoic speaking of feeding lies, you're doing a great job. Chop chop, go back to the cubicle, you're due to some more hours in training the AI. Free of charge, of course. Why paying for a willing SLAVE?
@@RejectedInch lols, is there an emotional blackmail low you wouldn't stoop to in order to justify your blind hatred of something you clearly have no understanding of, I guess not.
AI may be here to stay, but so are our voices!
All fellow artists, stay strong. We are making it through this!
Don't worry lad, we're still here!
How do you even know if someone drew an image with your style? how do you know if it was AI or person? What if I draw your art by hand and put years into it and then upload my art of your style into AI and then generate more of them you will claim copyright for them? when I made my art with your style and allowed it to be used in AI? Wake up
@@w2lfwhen you’ve spent over a decade learning art and finding your style, I’m pretty sure you’d know how to detect it. Trust me, even the untrained eye will always find something wrong with AI when compared to the original.
@@w2lf styles CANNOT be copyrighted, which is why this whole ai outrage is pointless. The only thing that breaks copyright is if an image is exactly the same as someone elses but ai doesnt copy, it generates new images.
Lol, no you aren't
This whole mess happened a week after declaring myself as an Illustration major. I’ve cried way too many times to count. I’m thankful that you spoke up. Artists need to speak about this. They need to hear us roar.
your not wrong. i get this. machines out compete me, i work 12 hour days, 7 days a week, even on christmas. and im lucky if i get paid min wage for 40 of thoise hours each week. but I have to keep in mind, I couldnt afford most of my work. I cant be made that people who are poor like myself pay corperations to utilize machines.
Your roar will mean nothing sadly.
Remember our world is money ran. If a decision can be made to increase profits and lower operating costs, the artist will be thrown away in favor of ai art which can produce vast amounts of art a business, individual, company, streamer, etc need in minutes compared to an artist can in a day.
@@eegernades Nah, you're just a loser talking loser nonsense.
There's no reason why artists should just give up and accept that their artwork is stolen and used to make money without being compensated.
Facebook was just given the largest fine in history and banned from doing something they shouldn't have done.
If artists go together in a class action-type lawsuit then they could get the rules clarified.
No reason to give up like a loser.
@@anderslarsen4412 I'm a realist, not a loser.
You're forgetting, the ai evolves. It won't need any human references in a year at this speed. Artist copyright will mean nothing in that instance.
The largest fine in history for a company like Facebook means nothing. It's just the cost of doing business as they make more than that a quarter even with losing money to meta endeavors and losing users.
Artist can get together, but won't mean a thing if the money keeps coming. A artist strike would be useless, a artist get together will be useless once the ai no longer needs an artist reference, which some like novel ai and chatgp are no longer needing. Imagine one more year.
@@eegernades The thing is that if artists don't give permission to train the AI with their work, then the AI can't replicate their art/art-style since it needs their images to do that. This is what Sam and the majority of artists are saying, artists are not against the AI itself, but against AI using their artwork without permission.
I have a feeling many artists will not want to give permission to their work since they don't want their work/art-style to be replicated/copied.
I think that if the AI program would only use and be trained on payed stock images and/or get the artists permission it should be fine. It would be fair and legal/not in any grey area.
I completely understand how artists who spend years honing their skills can feel frustrated with their work being appropriated by big-tech in such way, and yes, young artists might be feeling utter hopeless right now. It all feels quite unsavoury. That being said, nothing can stop the wheel of technological progress, and this is a typical case where people are going to have to adapt to this new reality.
there's a big difference between labor jobs being taken by machines and generative jobs like writing, drawing and composing. You by saying this are actively supporting the bulldozing of the entire art and creative industry.
@@Lambsauce10is there really? both are often done for peoples comfort and entertainment. If you can automate something that brings people happiness make it take less work to produce then whats the problem with that?
People throughout history have lost jobs to automation, it kinda just tends to happen, however these automations bring about good things long term.
@@Lambsauce10You surely don't even pay for the programs you use , so you are suporting the fall of programers industry
I want to add my two cents when it comes to the whole "inspiration" thing. Artists don't JUST get inspired from other artists and their works, theres more to it. Artists can get inspired by many things, such as music, fashion, video games, movies, aesthetics, cultures, etc. And every artist has their own unique combination of all these different things that pulls from their personality. I think this is something that quite a few people aren't aware of.
I don’t really have anything else to say that hasn’t already been said, so I’m just commenting on this video for the algorithm because more people need to see this and educate themselves. Ps I’ve been posting this same comment so many times I’m pretty sure at least one person thinks I’m a bot. 😅
@@sanityisboring. Gigachad
Yes, sure. But as a concept artist myself, I do get inspired by other people's works. I think the issue starts when a person directly copies another's work. Styles aren't coyrighted, and never have been.
AI takes everything. Photos, graphics, drawings, paintings. It will in the future use music and other media, I am sure. Some are being adapted to use video. This is not going to stop. Art will not be the one field affected (there is already fairly good AI that can code, for example).
Whether or not we like it, AI is here to stay. The cat is out of the box, people are free to train their own models and they have been. It is what it is, it's not going back. There's not putting Stable Diffusion away. Companies which don't leverage this tech will be out competed by the ones that do.
These programmers don't get us artists. They have ego basically. They think they understand what's it like to be one because they made a piece of code that generates art by analysing every single artwork on the internet, pretending it's not stealing. If only it was the other way around. Maybe then they would get it.
Most people understand why artists are hurting however it's not and ego thing, Im willing to die on the hill of AI, I still remember that old attitude from certain artists that was essentially "I can't be replaced", Ai makes things way more cost effective, not to mention inspiration, really as an argument, you understand the ai has the ability to not only use art but anything and everything we want to feed it for inspiration and it can take all of that into account instantly rather then "human touch" and it's many happy little accidents and one more with due time it'll be so advanced that waiting will be a thing of the past, I'm sure the market for a real artist will still be there but like everything else where people have been replaced, adapt, improvise and overcome, basically learn to live with it and find ways for it to help you or fall to way side. Your ultimatum, the only that has surprised me about it all is, how did some of the most creatives on earth get replaced before say putting stuff on a shelf
The ai itself doesn’t even get me that upset but the ai defenders that KNOW and understand how it works, make my blood boil because of their insensitivity towards artists…. “Keep crying” i will because this is my dream and an entire industry of people who spend hours getting there! Learning about ai and how people disrespect visual arts like this made me scared of even pursuing a creative career at all.
I'm just a hobbyist, but the implications of mass data laundering are dawning on me and it's really scary
Do your best not to let idiots on the internet get you down, that's what it's there for, and if someone hasn't put 1000 hours of blood sweat and tears into art they will never understand what it means to have it stolen from you - we've seen this pattern of people only caring when their neck is on the line before and we'll see if again
Even if this whole thing goes south there WILL still be a place for visual arts in the world though, it'll just be a bit more complicated. Don't lose hope, we will need people like you (and there are enough of us that the ai issue will not be a quiet affair regardless)
They know creation is literally the only one things that is worth in this world. You can feel the envy these people have of artists, they even call themselves artists when they make AI ""art"" which is quite the opposite of art.
These people seem like they're either trolls or morons. Human made art is the egg from which AI made art is hatched from. Humans have invented art styles and without human artists to keep innovating art and creating new visual aesthetics - the AI will just keep repeating the same existing styles.
Imagine if people were so weak willed that whenever someone put us down online we'd just give up. Imagine if all of the artists would just decide to stop making art or to stop sharing it online. That would instantly kill the progress of AI art generators. These people who claim to be in favor of the advancement of technology are trying to burn the fuel which feeds their machine.
I feel like most of the hostility is a reaction to the perceived hostility of artists towards non-artists. No one likes being called a thief using publicly available images to create something new. They are aware they didn't manually put in the time and effort to get the result, but often feel that the images are inspired by their imagination. I'd say its more similar to commissioning an "artist" for a piece in the style of a different artist. In the art community it could be seen as taboo if the work is publicized, but if the only person who requested the commission receives it's less so. Redistribution and monetization is the only reason I'd see there being a reason for conflict, otherwise I haven't really yet to see a reason why coexistence wouldn't be possible for creators and people who use these tools for personal use.
@@weeecalango2761 entitled much to be an artist compared to those people, who can't be ?
Honestly, you said it just right:
"There is no empathy, there is no understanding."
The problem stem from something that is a lot more ingrained into the mindset of people, and has started way before AI.
This idea that art on the internet is just out for grab. The absolute lack of respect for someone else work.
It was there before, with art thieves, and tracers, and using art without credits.
AI is just the culmination of that mindset, and does a lot more damage.
All the AI bootlickers are just the exemple of that mindset. They're just entitled brats, who throw a tantrum when told to respect someone else.
Preach ✨
I agree with ya.. Oh, the last part, LOUDER ! Sometimes I wanna be a real ghost so I could possess or live inside of one of those people, just to see/watch what is up with that mentality.. I lost some of mon précieux brain cells arguing with art thieves ~
For too long artists and nice people have been told to always take the higher road. Personally I'm sick of that malarkey, if these f*ckers wanna get down in the mud then I'll get right in there with them. I'm done playing nice
Or humans are the ones trying to cling on to what makes them special. We are all going to be out of a job soon. Not just artists. If it's about respect the pandora's box of disrespect has been opened. Although I sympathize with artists, it's just going to be a tough battle.
You know about Van Gogh? And there was Picasso. Who do you think was a better artist?
First: It cannot be directly said that AI companies are making illegal commercial use of works, because in reality, copyright law does not prohibit analyzing the patterns of an image with a computer, so that is not illegal use. It could become illegal if determined as such in the future, but that leads to:
Second: Even if it were declared illegal to study the patterns of an image with a computer without authorization, nothing prevents the company from hiring a handful of people to create works to feed the AI, many in styles as similar as possible to the artists who do not want to lend their works for training. In the end, it will be the same.
At least they would be paying someone
Ai can't draw, he mixing our art to make another art
I'm not an artist, but as a content creator myself, I understand how you guys feel. The fact that you guys put your heart and soul into these projects, only to have it be taken away is completely unfair. You artists deserve better.
I am an artist, and it's not like I have no sympathy for people of my kind, but I do think that the whole art stealing thing is laughable. Those who claim that ai is taking away their passions or something are unreasonable. Ai doesn't stop me from creating whatever I want and whenever I want. Another point: "Ai steals the art of others to generate images, without shouting out sources of inspiration". Yes, like human artists do. You may shout out the work of art you were inspired by, but there are things that inspire you unconsciously. You may see the shape of a building and place it in the back of your memory, so that when drawing you can return to it without even noticing. The same way you learn to draw anything. I've learnt to draw things not only by observing them, I also observed works of other artists and acknowledged their ways of solving the problems I was facing. I can't shout-out every single thing I saw in my life, that shaped my world image. And what if I will copy the style of other artist? What if I will make money off of it? If I am drawing as good as Leonardo Da Vinci did, but copy his style entirely isn't my income deserved? At the end of the day, he received his fame and fortune because of the beauty of his art, and my art might be just as stunning as his. If I deliver the same product for a cheaper price and take away someone's audience, what is so wrong about it? If I am inspired by someone's art there is nothing but my generous initiative that obliges me to shout-out the artist. The other idea is that ai is taking over people's jobs and therefore it is bad. Well that isn't a question of moral is it? If there is an artist better than me, taking away my clients it is in my interest to change my specialty or best myself in order to win the competition. I certainly wouldn't go out and protest against the skillful artist just because his efficiency hinders me. And though ai doesn't have feelings and imposing sanctions against it doesn't not hurt it, there are consumers, that would've received their product cheaper, faster and in a better quality only if you didn't show up with your selfish demands. For the same reason we might've not invented cars, since the coachmen would've lost their source of income. Every human invention was made for making our lifes easier, with every new technology there is one human job less. If ai will fully take over the arts the consequences will be the same, as those of industrialization. Many will loose their jobs, many will adapt, the lifes of many will become easier. This is just a part of human progress.
Funny sht is that the AI is trained by taking inspiration from other people's art, but most of the artists do the same thing. They open images that look similair to what they are trying to make and imitate it or even copy it to a certain degree. While i understand the feelings of uncertainty and being scared for your own profession, this is technological progress that you are seeing. The indrustrial age has replaced a lot of jobs as well and people were protesting against it. In the end everyone just accepted it. In the upcomming decades you'll see a lot more jobs replaced and humans protesting how unfair it is and i might be soon one of them. It is just technological progress.
@@Nuthing And yet technology is also a curse because people get complacent with convenience (unfortunate side effect)
@@Nuthing Exactly. The most ironic thing is that artists are already dispositioned to not be experts when it comes to technology [which is required if you want to understand the mathematical process of how AI art is actually created] and yet the very thing that challenges their existence is exactly that, something they are already dispositioned to not be able to understand.
I'm sure there are some artists who are also computer science majors out there [I don't make art but like graphic design/videography and I'm a CS major for example] but most simply lack the background to objectively evaluate the history of disruptive technologies and to confront the fact they are witnessing something that is by definition disruptive, it will disrupt if not completely brutalize people.
Once the figurative Pandora's box of technological progress is opened there is no stopping it, it's already assured.
i love you
The industry will try to deny anything we say because they are making money. We as artists have to stand up for ourselves. Thank you for putting this out there!
too many non corporate tech bros out here to do their bidding.
We are up against every single talentless nobody who was ever jealous of artists, coming out in support of this as their one hope to FINALLY be able to get thousands of likes for 0 effort.
the craft is now not neccessary, just imagination is enough, we, people of creativity but lack of painting skills can finally express our inner pictures without paying you money, deal with it
That's why it's SUPER important to not stand with big corporations with Disney when it comes to pushing toxic copyright regulations on the industry, because that will only HURT small creators and benefit the large corporations.
@@gierdziui9003 you should do it without using OUR art to train your AI then.
If you think we don't deserve credit than neither do you for any of the contrived CRAP you'll be putting out with AI.
You might as well sign ANYTHING you do with -AI instead of your own damn name
@@cosmicllama6910 Then why did you all give all your art to Epic Games? From Arttstation Terms of Service: " You hereby grant royalty-free, perpetual, world-wide, licenses (the “Licenses”) to Epic and our service providers to use, copy, modify, reformat and distribute Your Content, and to use the name that you provide in association with Your Content, in connection with providing the Services;"
Every artist posting their art on Artstation is allowing Epic to sell their art and keep the money. But now they're upset at who Epic's customers are?
Hating artists is really the beginning of our downfall as a civilization. Artists are creators. We need these minds.
Artists are usually grifters and schemers.
The hubris of your comment is why people hate artists. They’re mostly creepy scum with a god-complex. Do something useful.
@@ThatZenoGuyLMFAO!!HOW WOULD YOU KNOW?? I MEAN AFTER ALL, YOU AREN’T AN ARTIST??
@@ThatZenoGuy Americans are usually racist and imperialist.
Now I sound like an asshole, don’t I?
Well, AI artist might be an artist too. he just didnt had 10 years of drawing practice to draw, but is art just a skill? If no the AI artist is as artist as not AI, he just skipped the skill grind part.
I never made AI art, never drew an art- so I am not an artist. But does amount of manual labor matters in this case? Or the art and what I feel when I see it matters more?
I thought that art is about making people feel stuff, to interpret something, to see things in a new way. Why the medium matters?
Its the same as to say: than singing is not an art, you cant touch it. Or singing is an art but drums are not, as you jkust bang on this man made thing. Ok whats with electric drum? Or with software drum which is basically and a sequenscer. Its all the same, the person behind matters more.
And we come to questions what is an art and how AI can not be an art.
I think a lot of AI made stuff is not an ART, same with hand made stuff. But its way easier to generate 10000 pictures with ai and uipload it somewhere and call it a day
And its a lot harder to draw 1 image of this visual quality. So by the time you can draw as good as AI you are more intensional with wha you draw and % of what you draw being an art is way bigger.
But anyway saltiness of some people came from their effort not being appreciated, I guess.
It might be effort to draw or to make prompts and sort thru images it gives you. Sometimes you draw meaningless images noone feels shit seeing it, sometimes you generate sthings noone gives a shit, just a glance becaue AI makes it look well drawn, but its still meaningless image.
Its an artist who makes thing an art, doesnt matter the tool- brush, pen, AI model or a photo camera
I don't think a lot of people are going to see this, but I hope it helps!
There are ways to actually both protect your work from being used for image generation AND poison the ai art pool! It's actually quite amazing, especially since it shouldn't change how your image looks. One of them is called nightshade!
So, don't worry, you don't have to give up your art without a fight!
news:yeah it does not work like intended to work, it is just a annoying at most, but it is not gonna prevent anything.
@@Stardashy ai never steals any artwork though
"Motivation and imagination is one of the biggest reasons why art exists in the first place, if that ceases to exist in people, it just feels like we've taken the beauty of human mind for granted".
No we will literally die if you take away a living being's fighting spirit and creativity.
Creativity is NOT just about visual art, it is literally what helps you solve problems, helps you to express yourself.
AI images will not kill art. Too much of a novelty. It might kill online commission art
Literally what I’m thinking off
@@watching7721well agree but we just feel whatever we do will be tiny, whatever work we expose will be stolen, it’s just not right.
You are vastly overestimating the value of (most) human imagination. Just look at Hollywood and videogames as of late. Everything is a copy of something else. Very few individuals are actually driving human creativity and those individuals will not suffer from AI since they will be the very foundation of its greatness.
after hearing about AI, my mom told me I would have no chance in this industry.this video made her understand the situation, thanks sam
She's absolutely right. Except, it's not "you having no chance in this industry" it's "no one has a chance in any industry". It's only a matter of 5-10 years before 95%+ of jobs are taken over by AIs and robots. The only industries that is going to hold out longer than others are ones where the point is being personable, like UA-camrs, but even those will be replaced in 10-15 years.
It's best to not view art as something that you're going to make a living off of. When there aren't any human jobs left, your art will be a hobby, and that's fine. If you enjoy art, you'll keep doing it even when no one is getting paid for work anymore.
@@jagger1008 just from what u said,it's pretty obvious that your not an artist,just because AI is here doesn't mean we are gonna get replaced ever.
Companies don't hire AI,they hire artist with experience and skill to get the work done,Art is something that evolves with us humans.
No matter how great AI is,it's still not close to an actual person skill,just take WLOP art,an AI can replicate that art but won't be as beautiful and masterful as WLOP artwork.
@@avyukthsanthosha2885 You're mistaken. I predict that 95% of intellectual and creative jobs will be taken by AI within the next 5-10 years.
You're under the mistaken impression that you or any other human will be able to compete with future AI. You can't. The AI is going to be a million times the artist you are, and a million times the software developer I am. There will be no reason to hire people anymore in the near future. We're not going to be competing with AI on an even playing field, AIs will develop godlike intellect and creativity, we're only just seeing the start.
@@jagger1008 what are we ALL gonna do if computers and robots will do everything? 😂 Living like cats?
I think the biggest issue is the fact that you and every other artist out there has spent years and years, practicing, making mistakes, spending days hating themselves and their art, and then finally achieving successes to get to where they are today. There was so much work and effort put in along the way. Everyone thinks that artist are just pure talent so then they think that its doesn't hurt them when that talent is taken that away from them. The truth is no one understands how much effort it takes, talent only goes so far. All artists understand that they have to make countless mistakes and that they have to push themselves to not give up on days where they hate their art, to get to where they want to be. No one gets good at art in a day or even in just one year. Its about the fact years and years of practice, struggle, difficulty, art blocks, love, inspiration, passion, creativity and dedication has been taken from them by machines and then spat out into the world in just a couple of seconds. Its just not fair. Like the machines would never have been able to create the art in the first place if it wasn't for the years and years everyone put in to honing their craft.
@@Tycondaroga100speak by yourself...
@@Tycondaroga100 Digital Art is NOT "click" = Beautiful Art, my boy.
SinfuelAeon is 100% right on the money. As an illustrator, I feel like I have wasted my life. I could have been anything, a lawyer, a doctor...I was a good student you know.
However, I chose art and my passion (which I knew to be low-paying career, compared to all the others that were within my reach). And now I get this. Just because some tech-bros decided to shatter my lifework overnight, and actually steal artist's work, then use that to replace the artists that they stole from. And then I see some internet kids mocking my entire life with "bohoo, just get over it". I'm glad they don't do that IRL to my face (for their and my sake) because on the wrong day, I would probably go to prison.
It's so easy to say these things over internet... these kids don't understand how serious matter this is for the ones who chose this as a career path, committed to it years ago and closed other doors behind them, ages ago. I'm mid-aged, I'm worthless at job market if they make my only skill obsolete... I'm literally nothing without it. For now I have a job, possibly because my boss has known me for years and feels sorry for me? There's literally 0 reasons why he couldn't replace me tomorrow with this machine. And probably get better results, faster
Honestly, I don't think true talent exists. People who are "talented" are simply more interested and more willing to put in the effort to achieve certain things
@@birdmanip Lol no. So you could be Mozart or John Lennon or Garri Kasparov or Albert Einstein or Usain Bolt if you "put in the effort". Please
You couldn't be Rembrandt either. Yes you can learn Photoshop if you "put in the effort" but you won't learn to make good, eye-pleasing composition, unless you have artistic talent
Ibis paint x now has a free feature on their program to put a filter over your work that makes it much harder for ai to steal
Doesn't Matter if It was a paid feature artists would crack It anyway , just like any other program , thats also a thing to Talk about
Is it too late to cease Ai? Will everyone be laid off by Ai? Will Ai jobloss be the new normal? Swell robots doing everything. All so we can obey an Ai new world order?