Full AI - The End of Humanity?

After seeing the film Her, it got me thinking about AI again.

The world's got a lot of lonely people. The internet in general multiplies that. On the one hand, it helps giving someone an ear to talk to, but on the other hand, it's pretty dangerous, especially to people with a mental illness.

Remember how zombie films were all the rage in the early to mid 2000s? Expect AI to be this decades cinematic schlock.:lol:
 
I followed a link from the above article to one more directly focused on AI. While I understand concerns about job security, I really disagree with some of the positions taken against AI. Some quotes from the article:

"AI can’t write or rewrite literary material; can’t be used as source material; and MBA-covered material can’t be used to train AI."

Outside of the last one I can obviously see why the AMPTP is pushing back. AI can provide the first two things faster and cheaper. This can be good for the writers. I won't pretend to know how things work in Hollywood, but I assume more shows means a bigger need for writers and editors. It seems like instead of adapting to the technology, they are trying to suppress it.

There was also this:

"With streamers' addiction to paying minimums, we can clearly see a future in which the first drafts are done by AI to circumvent the cost of a real first draft — leaving all of the creative heavy lifting to be done by writers for bottom dollar. Are the studios pursuing this? Not to my knowledge at the moment. But the fact that they did not flat out agree to it when we asked them not to is extraordinarily revelatory. If you ask the person you’re dating not to cheat on you and they refuse to promise not to, that’s what we call a big red flag."

Financial concerns clear, but what does this have to do with cheating on people? WGA is basically saying it's unfair to make use of advances in technology. Such a bizarre stance to take.

I'm not part of the discussion, so I freely admit that I might be missing details, but from what I am seeing I think the WGA is leaning too much toward complacency. They're not trying to work with AI for their own benefit. They're trying to keep the status quo out of fear.
 
"With streamers' addiction to paying minimums, we can clearly see a future in which the first drafts are done by AI to circumvent the cost of a real first draft — leaving all of the creative heavy lifting to be done by writers for bottom dollar. Are the studios pursuing this? Not to my knowledge at the moment. But the fact that they did not flat out agree to it when we asked them not to is extraordinarily revelatory. If you ask the person you’re dating not to cheat on you and they refuse to promise not to, that’s what we call a big red flag."

Financial concerns clear, but what does this have to do with cheating on people? WGA is basically saying it's unfair to make use of advances in technology. Such a bizarre stance to take.

I'm not part of the discussion, so I freely admit that I might be missing details, but from what I am seeing I think the WGA is leaning too much toward complacency. They're not trying to work with AI for their own benefit. They're trying to keep the status quo out of fear.
The reason they say "bottom dollar" for a rewrite is that, based on my understanding, writers typically do not get paid as much to "punch up" an existing script as they would to create something from scratch. They are concerned that they will be handed AI generated garbage and told to "punch it up" for rewrite pay, and have to do all of the work they typically would do anyway. It does seem like a legitimate arguing point.

It also seems to be easy to work around. The parties could stipulate that AI generated work does not constitute a draft that needs a "rewrite" or "punch up".
 
They are concerned that they will be handed AI generated garbage and told to "punch it up" for rewrite pay, and have to do all of the work they typically would do anyway. It does seem like a legitimate arguing point.
I agree, if nothing is changing for them, it would make sense that their pay stays the same. The problem here is less AI and more how compensation is handled. If you can use anything as a first pass no matter the quality and then modifications to that are counted as rewrites no matter how much work goes into the rewrite, something is off. I'd be trying to fix that.
It also seems to be easy to work around. The parties could stipulate that AI generated work does not constitute a draft that needs a "rewrite" or "punch up".
Yeah, there are a lot of options that don't involve barring AI.
 
Yeah, there are a lot of options that don't involve barring AI.
For writers, sure. But actors? (The AI issue with SAG-AFTRA involves Hollywood wanting to scan the actors and keeping the rights to the scan for future AI use.)
 
For writers, sure. But actors? (The AI issue with SAG-AFTRA involves Hollywood wanting to scan the actors and keeping the rights to the scan for future AI use.)
Actors should definitely have control over their likeness. AI can fill roles in similar ways that stunt doubles or CGI animations do.
 
OpenAI just released DALL-E 3


Like previous versions, we’ve taken steps to limit DALL·E 3’s ability to generate violent, adult, or hateful content.

DALL·E 3 has mitigations to decline requests that ask for a public figure by name. We improved safety performance in risk areas like generation of public figures and harmful biases related to visual over/under-representation, in partnership with red teamers—domain experts who stress-test the model—to help inform our risk assessment and mitigation efforts in areas like propaganda and misinformation.

We’re also researching the best ways to help people identify when an image was created with AI. We’re experimenting with a provenance classifier—a new internal tool that can help us identify whether or not an image was generated by DALL·E 3—and hope to use this tool to better understand the ways generated images might be used. We’ll share more soon.

DALL·E 3 is designed to decline requests that ask for an image in the style of a living artist. Creators can now also opt their images out from training of our future image generation models.


it seems to have improved quite a bit, especially with text. Some examples from their site:

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I suspect unscrupulous parties will hack the software to remove the provenance features but hopefully they'll find it harder to get around living creators (and ones like Jimi Hendrix whose estate is actively managed) refusing to have their data logged.
 
OpenAI just released DALL-E 3





it seems to have improved quite a bit, especially with text. Some examples from their site:

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This technology i find very interesting, and the future of it. I don’t imagine we’re too far away from being able to create a 3D space in the same manner, that you can access in VR. So then the next step would have anybody with the right interface able to create custom gaming environments with simple prompts - something not too far removed from Star Trek’s holodecks. Where this technology is now was barely imaginable 15 years ago, so in another 15 or 20 years…
 
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One issue that is already becoming apparent with AI is that it ain't going to be cheap to use it.

ChatGPT 4 is $20/mo ; Midjourney ranges from $10 a month for a very limited package to $120/mo, plus $4/hr for extra GPU time (plus there is no free trail on Midjourney any more) ; Stable Diffusion is $9 / $49 / $149/mo, again with very limited use at the lower end subscriptions.

Depending on who is using it and for what, prices could rise very significantly to the point where higher end functionality won't be affordable to the average person.

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I've spent some time this morning exploring options for free AI generators, and Bing seems to be the best option at the moment.

Bing Chat apparently works from ChatGPT4, and also allows you to use Dall-E 3 for free, albeit only 25 times per month without wait times. I've been playing with it for work (honestly!) this morning and it is quite amazing...

--

"Researcher speaking to a team of consultants to discuss ideas in a meeting called an Opportunity Audit":

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... and a flyer based on it:

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And another flyer:

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A new logo for our team:

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"a montage to summarise 'Health & Wellbeing'"

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"A GT2 car in a forest"

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This last one is mind-blowing, given the prompt used above only.
 
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This last one is mind-blowing, given the prompt used above only.
So, I'm currently messing with Gencraft to get some ideas, paid version at the moment is £10/week for "unlimited" (throttles after about 100 generations it seems).


Anyhow, the same prompt with basic settings, for comparison.

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Bing is quite good at getting results quick and easy without the added costs involved.

A few bases around a global map made using race cars.

The last being my favourite.
 
Hey @Sprite, please add your artwork to this thread: https://www.gtplanet.net/forum/threads/share-your-ai-art.418486/#post-14108041

I like the 4th one alot!

Bing is great for playing with, and I also think it is a seriously valuable tool for work as well.

Just playing with it for a few hours has really triggered my imagination, which is highly ironic because I thought that AI image generation was all about letting AI be creative for you. I think that is a risk for some, however, but for me it's currently like being a kid in a candy store.

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I'm finding that most prompts that involve parts of the human body are being blocked... I can understand why, and I guess that the reason is fairly self-evidence, but it does make it quite difficult to make realisitic images that involve people.
 
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I thought that AI image generation was all about letting AI be creative for you. I think that is a risk for some, however, but for me it's currently like being a kid in a candy store.
It really depends on what you want. I'm excited about AI not because I want it to think for me, but because I want it to work for me. I want to be the one in control and the one coming up with ideas while AI is the one that actually creates the end product. Though even in that case, I can't deny the benefits for creativity. An AI can potentially study and take input from many many times more images (or whatever it is one is trying to make) and avoid my own personal leanings to help me consider ideas I might not have come up with on my own. Then that is just multiplied by the ability to produce outputs far faster than I can. In the end, maybe it isn't that surprising that it can boost one's own originality.
 
It really depends on what you want. I'm excited about AI not because I want it to think for me, but because I want it to work for me. I want to be the one in control and the one coming up with ideas while AI is the one that actually creates the end product. Though even in that case, I can't deny the benefits for creativity. An AI can potentially study and take input from many many times more images (or whatever it is one is trying to make) and avoid my own personal leanings to help me consider ideas I might not have come up with on my own. Then that is just multiplied by the ability to produce outputs far faster than I can. In the end, maybe it isn't that surprising that it can boost one's own originality.

Or replace it.

I see the death of catalog photography, or at least relegated to the valueless level of stock work. Also, marketing firms can probably fire half the staff. Maybe 3/4. While we’re cleaving things.. banks and the like can probably fire half as well. Which is fine. Those people haven’t really done much for years. More like middle class welfare than an occupation. Im sure insurance can do the same with their cubicle dwellers.

It will be interesting to see how this shakes put in about a decade.
 
Or replace it.

I see the death of catalog photography, or at least relegated to the valueless level of stock work. Also, marketing firms can probably fire half the staff. Maybe 3/4. While we’re cleaving things.. banks and the like can probably fire half as well. Which is fine. Those people haven’t really done much for years. More like middle class welfare than an occupation. Im sure insurance can do the same with their cubicle dwellers.

It will be interesting to see how this shakes put in about a decade.
Generic mass produced content made by humans may end up going extinct, yes. I'm not sure if that is a huge loss. It would allow people to focus on bigger better projects and with AI to do the heavy lifting, small niches that were not sustainable enough to be catered to may thrive.

The future is uncertain though, so I agree that we will still have to wait to get a better idea of where we're headed.
 
I mostly want to focus on creative work as far as AI is concerned.

All my life I have been a creative person. When I see all the AI art out there, I always felt making something you produce through AI takes away originality and actually making something look as impressive as AI can provide. It is sort of the reason why I stay away from filters for art or stories. This is also why I stayed away from AI... until recently.

I am starting to come around to the mindset that AI should HELP you and not REPLACE you, at least in regards to creative work. Even the most trash creative work done by people can bear more originality and uniqueness than when someone uses AI to produce something impressive that one could have done all along. For example, anyone with any decent ability to 3D model can make a simple house. AI could turn that simple house to look like it should sell for north of $500K USD. Could you 3D model a house to look as impressive as an AI interpretation? Absolutely. However, what if you don't have those skills or the patience to make something impressive? That is where AI can help.

I guess my problem with AI in creative work is that it makes you feel sorry you can't make quality material on your own without the aid of computer technology. Where I am starting to think differently is that you still provide your own idea, and then the AI generator turns your idea(s) from simple to advanced. You still are supplying the ideas; AI just tries to make simple simply impressive. I am kind of thinking of using AI for concept design. I don't have the skills to make impressive digital art or 3D models. So I will look to AI to make the most true-to-life concepts possible.

Again- I am slowly changing my views regarding AI in creative work. Or at least, trying to...
 
Like many things, it can be used as a tool to help a skilled tradesperson do better work or to do the same work faster than they otherwise could. Or it can be abused by someone with no knowledge to produce a barely passable result.

If you're an artist simply looking to create something that suits your vision, there is no problem here. It's another tool that may or may not help you.

The problem mainly lies in the fact that it potentially automates the skilled work of a decently sized group of people, removing their ability to comfortably support themselves doing something they probably enjoy. But that's a problem with society. It has happened to other professions before, it will happen to other professions after. Throwing away this potentially useful thing isn't the solution any more than throwing clogs into steam powered looms was a solution. Fixing the system so that creatives aren't dependent on rigid control of the supply and "ownership" of art in order to survive seems much more sensible to me.
 
As a blogger, I have seen AI as possibly a way to generate some generic images to describe a certain topic without needing to find certain images from other sites to hotlink. Like, if I was to blog about car care, I could come up with a simple AI generated image to show a car being worked on to set the mood for the blog post. It's a safe way to get in some pictures without relying on other sites. You may need to run one prompt a few times to get a result you actually like, but I can see some non-guilty uses for AI.
 
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