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AI Megathread
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@Rinel Lol, OK. So obviously we’re into extreme bad faith territory here.
That took me maybe 10 minutes to do. And most of that was the usual multitasking of change settings->look at something else while images generate->look at results , change settings, repeat. The 36 image grid took ~5 minutes, so I left the computer. That’s the point. You want to bang on ‘oh my god, it added an ear, it didn’t have a tail, it doesn’t understaaaaand’. I fixed the ear instantly (again, no photoshop - I just put a blob over the ear and told it ‘crown instead, plz’). I could obviously add a fucking tail. I’m not going to do more because it’s pretty clear I could give you the Picasso of Pikachu vs. Darth Maulard and you’d complain about a single pixel.
Even though your goalpost was ‘MS paint doodle.’ Lets see your doodle so we can critique it.
There’s a lot of casual dismissal of the tech here, which is fine I guess, you’re entitled to your opinions. They won’t change the people who are going to be (or already are) out of jobs for this stuff. It’s not going to completely erase humans (that’s a straw man no one is suggesting), but when a human using these tools is as productive as a dozen without it, then you don’t have to pay 11 humans. And that’s tangentially what you saw in the D&D case: someone who found it useful, due to their workload and time constraints, to use the tool to finish a project for a deadline. They got caught, but the lesson won’t be ‘don’t use AI’ it will be ‘let’s make sure we use better looking AI.’
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@Faraday said in AI Megathread:
@Griatch said in AI Megathread:
ut the LLMs are advancing very quickly now, and I think it’s unrealistic to think they will remain as comparatively primitive as they are now. In a year or two, you will be able to get that Picachu image exactly like you want it, with realistic light sabers, facial expressions and proper lighting.
The writing models are extremely unlikely to advance in this same kind of way because they lack context. They are word calculators, stringing words together without really understanding what those words mean because there is no actual intelligence behind the engines. From my understanding, the art versions work in similar ways and are therefore unlikely to make the same leaps, but admittedly I haven’t studied them as much.
It’s indeed a limit for text generation, not so much for image generation as far as I understand. That said, I believe what will happen is that multiple agents will be working together instead, each a specialist in its field, holding its own context. This is how our brain works (if you squint a bit) and how GPT-4 is designed apparently. But note that a million-token context research paper is already out, it had several follow-ups since. And considering how fast new research is coming out on LLMs, it would not surprise me if we see a few more breakthroughs sooner rather than later.
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@Rinel this is not me snarking but asking a legitimate question. If you believe this:
@Rinel said in AI Megathread:
Barring an economic revolution that is long-coming and never here, the result of this particular utopia is the collapse of widespread art as the practice reverts to only those privileged enough to spend large amounts of time on hobbies that they can’t use to help make a living. It’s difficult to fully describe how horrific this scenario is, but it’s the death of dreams and creativity for literal millions of people.
It would legitimately be better to destroy /all/ LLMs and prohibit their existence than to pay that cost.then why do you do this:
@Rinel said in AI Megathread:
I’ve been using Midjourney for quite some time now,
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@Griatch said in AI Megathread:
As for me, I find it’s best to embrace it; Digital art will be AI-supported within the year. Me wanting to draw something will be my own hobby choice rather than necessity.
are you aware that artists for whom this is NOT a hobby are suffering from this thing you’re excited to “embrace”
When photography displaced illustrators there was a new human art form that supported human creativity and jobs. When digital art allowed quick work in a new medium it was still human artists at work.
AI removes the human and removes the employment and does so by unethical sourcing of human effort. To say that’s no different than painting in photoshop is naive at best and disingenuous at worst.
Very cool that AI is making your comp sketches and light studies for you now. It’s still a problem. Embracing it should still be questioned until and unless it has ethical restraints.
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I’m sorry, I just snorted water down the wrong pipe cuz of this.
@bored said in AI Megathread:
It’s not going to completely erase humans (that’s a straw man no one is suggesting)
@imstillhere said in AI Megathread:
AI removes the human and removes the employment and does so by unethical sourcing of human effort. To say that’s no different than painting in photoshop is naive at best and disingenuous at worst.
No offense to anyone, just found it hella funny.
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@hellfrog said in AI Megathread:
@Testament said in AI Megathread:
However, the pessimistic nihilist in me would look at forums like here, MSB, r/MUDs see the kind of toxicity that are entirely bred within them and it makes me consider, “Okay, but what if we just remove the human element to it?”
then they would not exist. a forum with chatGPT posts would just be pages and pages of spam no human ever bothered to look at. theft on a cosmic scale, justified by nothing
I meant that more in the context by the example of humanity we see in forums like this place, was sardonically questioning if removing the human element from mushes and replacing it with AI be an improvement, even if you the person wasn’t aware that the change was made once AI is to that kind of point. While yes, it technically being a single player text game, would it be better.
That is until AIs learn to shitpost. Actually, I think they already do.
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@Testament said in AI Megathread:
@hellfrog said in AI Megathread:
@Testament said in AI Megathread:
However, the pessimistic nihilist in me would look at forums like here, MSB, r/MUDs see the kind of toxicity that are entirely bred within them and it makes me consider, “Okay, but what if we just remove the human element to it?”
then they would not exist. a forum with chatGPT posts would just be pages and pages of spam no human ever bothered to look at. theft on a cosmic scale, justified by nothing
I meant that more in the context by the example of humanity we see in forums like this place, was sardonically questioning if removing the human element from mushes and replacing it with AI be an improvement, even if you the person wasn’t aware that the change was made once AI is to that kind of point. While yes, it technically being a single player text game, would it be better.
That is until AIs learn to shitpost. Actually, I think they already do.
What would be interesting is, once AI is advanced enough, replacing human voices on a forum one by one with AIs taught to mimic them, until there are no humans left, and seeing if they can continue posting ad infinitum at each other.
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@Coin ad infinitum ad hominem would be a great tagline.
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I can’t wait for people to be outraged because AI is taking away the function of soldiers in the battlefield because wars are being fought with AI-piloted drones.
“You’re taking away the chance for people to be able to pay for college!!!”
Haha.
Capitalism.
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@sao said in AI Megathread:
@Coin ad infinitum ad hominem would be a great tagline.
Would it be more accurate flipped? Or do I just not know enough Latin?
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@Coin You know, I’d probably never need tv again. Just arguments created by AIs.
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That is until AIs learn to shitpost. Actually, I think they already do.
Heh. This is making me mention Microsoft’s Tay again.
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@SpaceKhomeini Wasn’t that the one where a bunch of 4chan trolls turned the AI racist?
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@imstillhere said in AI Megathread:
@Griatch said in AI Megathread:
As for me, I find it’s best to embrace it; Digital art will be AI-supported within the year. Me wanting to draw something will be my own hobby choice rather than necessity.
are you aware that artists for whom this is NOT a hobby are suffering from this thing you’re excited to “embrace”
When photography displaced illustrators there was a new human art form that supported human creativity and jobs. When digital art allowed quick work in a new medium it was still human artists at work.
Yes, I expect this will dramatically change the art industry. I can see why people are legitmately concerned. Same is true for a lot of white-collar jobs (for once, the blue-collar workers may be safest off). While I don’t work as a professional artist, I expect my own job in IT to fundamentally change or even go away too, as programmers eventually become baby-sitters of AI programmers rather than actually code ourselves. Since I think that this is inevitable, I’m trying to learn as much as I can about it already.
AI removes the human and removes the employment and does so by unethical sourcing of human effort.
There’s definitely discussions to be had about the ethical sources of the training data; OSS models (which is what I use, since I run these things locally) are already trying to shift to using more ethically sourced, freely available data sets (but yes, there are still issues there, considering the size of the corpus). You can in fact look into those data sets if you want - they are publicly searchable. Companies with proprietary solutions (Midjourney is particularly bad here) will hopefully be forced to do so by lawsuits and regulation, eventually. But that said, I’d think that even an AI completely trained on public-domain images will still change the industry, so it’s not like this changes the fundamental fact of the matter: LLM processing is here to stay.
To say that’s no different than painting in photoshop is naive at best and disingenuous at worst.
AI image generation is only one aspect of LLMs. It on its own is certainly not the same as painting in Photoshop, and I never suggested as much. But I do expect photoshop to have AI support to speed up your painting process in the future - for example, you sketch out a face and the AI cleans it up for you, that kind of thing (not that I use Photoshop, I’m an OSS guy. ). But yeah, for professional artists, I fear the future will be grim unless they find some way to go with the flow and find a new role for themselves; it will become hard for companies not using AI to compete.
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Re: AI’s shitposting on forums, Reddit is way ahead of us!
And war? Without getting into the grim realities of a present conflict, I instead refer to a classic ‘Simpsons did it’: https://youtu.be/qEvTlARQJAY?t=203
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@Testament said in AI Megathread:
@SpaceKhomeini Wasn’t that the one where a bunch of 4chan trolls turned the AI racist?
I mean maybe it was 4chan-related but it was just “We exposed a chatbot to Twitter with the express purpose that it would learn from posters that engaged it.”
A bit more on that: I worked at Microsoft Research (I was in an infrastructure role) 2015-2016 and was there for that fiasco. What baffled me was that leadership made heads roll over that shit and I just don’t understand how unprepared they were for what was obviously going to happen.
I was talking with one of the researchers who was just laughing at the whole mess and told him they needed to cast a wider net in terms of qualifications for projects like this. I mean, I had an active Somethingawful forums account since the early 2000s, that’s all it took to turn me into a Cassandra.
The people building and peddling this shit just have no idea sometimes.
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@Griatch said in AI Megathread:
But yeah, for professional artists, I fear the future will be grim unless they find some way to go with the flow and find a new role for themselves; it will become hard for companies not using AI to compete.
This is what I expected, but the first people that made me start considering the positive effects of AI on the field of professional art are my friends who are professional artists. Most of them seem really happy with adding to their toolkit. Concept Art in hours what would previously take them days, or in the same amount of time being able to do significantly more iterations resulting in what they feel is a better final product. The takeaway I’ve got from conversations with them is that it will come down to quality of studio whether they use AI tools to level-up the art departments, or attempt to replace them. But as one said “An AI isn’t going to take my job. It will be a professional peer who knows how to use AI better than me.”
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@shit-piss-love well yes, but that’s not a very useful distinction when an entire career path is staring down the barrel of a gun - because even though there will still be work for those who can incorporate and use AI to their advantage, there will be much less available work than there is now.
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@Griatch said in AI Megathread:
Yes, I expect this will dramatically change the art industry. I can see why people are legitmately concerned. Same is true for a lot of white-collar jobs (for once, the blue-collar workers may be safest off).
I mean, exactly? It’s not like AI is doing anything new in terms of the exploitation and replacement of humanity within labor fields.
I’m not saying it’s ethical, I’m just saying that once art becomes labor, once it is bought and sold and entire industries are built on the art created, it becomes subject to the same rules, regulations, and pitfalls that all labor is subject to under capitalism. There’s no way to avoid that except for bringing down capitalism. The idea that ethical regulations will do anything to stop this is a pipedream. At best, it will slow it down.
AI image generation is only one aspect of LLMs. It on its own is certainly not the same as painting in Photoshop, and I never suggested as much. But I do expect photoshop to have AI support to speed up your painting process in the future - for example, you sketch out a face and the AI cleans it up for you, that kind of thing (not that I use Photoshop, I’m an OSS guy. ). But yeah, for professional artists, I fear the future will be grim unless they find some way to go with the flow and find a new role for themselves; it will become hard for companies not using AI to compete.
Photoshop already integrated some AI stuff into its latest, IIRC. You can have photoshop essentially “finish” or “expand” art so that it fills out what’s missing past the edges of a picture. Lol. It’s wild.
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@shit-piss-love said in AI Megathread:
@Griatch said in AI Megathread:
But yeah, for professional artists, I fear the future will be grim unless they find some way to go with the flow and find a new role for themselves; it will become hard for companies not using AI to compete.
This is what I expected, but the first people that made me start considering the positive effects of AI on the field of professional art are my friends who are professional artists. Most of them seem really happy with adding to their toolkit. Concept Art in hours what would previously take them days, or in the same amount of time being able to do significantly more iterations resulting in what they feel is a better final product. The takeaway I’ve got from conversations with them is that it will come down to quality of studio whether they use AI tools to level-up the art departments, or attempt to replace them. But as one said “An AI isn’t going to take my job. It will be a professional peer who knows how to use AI better than me.”
That’s encouraging to hear! If your friends feel they are on top of the coming changes, all the more power to them.