Comment on Disney's Sora Disaster Shows AI Will Not Revolutionize Hollywood
supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 2 hours agoNope, this is a bullshitters tool for people with no talent who want to pretend there is a shortcut to making good art.
The tool you are obsessed with is just a way of convincing yourself you made something when jt was stolen from other human artists when the AI you are using illegally stole a massive amount of content.
mindbleach@sh.itjust.works 1 hour ago
You’re having a much more contentious conversation inside your head. Please stop projecting traits you’d rather be arguing against, when someone points out, it does the thing it’s for. It demonstrably functions. You could make a coherent moral argument about how it was made - but you haven’t. You’ve railed against an imaginary frothing psychopath, because someone politely described utility.
How it was made is addressable, by the way. It’s fixable. There will be vegan models made from bespoke, licensed, and public-domain data. Will that change your opinion in any way? Or is that complaint decorative?
supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 1 hour ago
Stop referencing promises to prove your point, you sound like a door to door salesperson.
mindbleach@sh.itjust.works 1 hour ago
Okay, here’s reality from the recent past: some guy recreated GPT-2 for $20. Same size, similar training data, equal performance. The original required VC funding. This guy spent pocket change. That was a year ago. That’s how much efficiency has already improved, for training these models. These assholes only spend billions because it’s exclusionary, and they’re all caught in a dollar auction to see who can lose the gentlest. I’m sorry any hypotheticals about that are incompatible with your moral crusade.
Meanwhile, it does the thing.
That’s not going to change and you kind of have to deal with it. We now have programs that just do what you ask, for any output that’s text, images, audio, or video. They often fuck up in horrifying ways. But they’re usually about what you asked for. Especially if you asked for very little. That’s quite useful where small changes are wildly complex, like ‘make this guy look like another guy.’ The robot won’t do it as good as a team of human professionals, but I don’t have a million dollars to hire a team of human professionals, and I’m betting you don’t either. You can still consider projects that involve making one guy look like another.
That utility is new and it’s not going anywhere.
supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz 51 minutes ago
I am an artist so I understand when I have the shallow desire to make something into a copy of another thing and my artistic capability fails me, or my lack of resources confines me from reaching my initial vision, that this is the true beginning of my artistic journey and all of that stuff before was just a way of backing myself into wanting something new or changed when I couldn’t get the perfect thing I wanted that was in my head.
I have done lots of community theater so I also understand the foolishness of thinking that the important part of making one thing look like another is aesthetic mimcry and not of capturing the elegant essence of something.
Do you think for all these years everybody watching Shakespeare plays has been getting a suboptimal experience because the two actors that are meant to play characters easily mistaken from each other aren’t actually perfectly convincing?
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Do you care that in Hamnet that two siblings that are supposed to look so alike that they are frequently mistook for one another, even by death itself, don’t actually look that similar? No, they are child actors who did an amazing job, to care about that in the context of the achievement Hamnet is, is to be shallow and miss the point.
My point is that even when AI is good at particular things, often the whole approach is hollow to Why? with AI. This is something artists could have explained easily to techbros if they ever listened, because the Why? is the whole point.