Comment on NVIDIA CEO says relentless negativity around AI is hurting society and has "done a lot of damage"
lvxferre@mander.xyz 1 day agoI think the negative reaction is composed of multiple factors coming together:
- slop (as you said),
- people using the slop to add noise to the internet,
- harmful output (not talking about the paperclip problem; think on Grok sexualising minors, or ChatGPT fuelling mental issues)
- businesses shoving those models everywhere and being extra pushy about them,
- environmental and geopolitical issues,
- authorship and intellectual property issues,
- “training” being made with no regards to consent of the creators,
- all that “you’re now obsolete garbage! Soon we’ll be able to trash you and replace you with AI!” bzzz-bzzz-bzzz,
- supply and demand of hardware parts…
…phew. All of that while disingenuous people — like Huang, Altman or Nadella — feign ignorance on why people complain about it and pretend it’s a bunch of primitives backslashing against “the future”.
You’d need to fix a lot of those to make people like AI. Not just the slop.
OpenStars@piefed.social 14 hours ago
That seems a solid listing. I would add one more: companies that did actually fire their workforces and attempt to replace them with a"i” now having regretted it, and likely to the tune of that decision having destroyed their entire company.
Although my earlier comment was purely about the slop present on YouTube - where slop or no slop, already the monetization aspects have been so destructive to the utility of those videos.
This now makes me curious: does the term “slop” apply beyond text, images, and videos? I thought “ai” coding was called “vibe-coding” rather than slop?
lvxferre@mander.xyz 12 hours ago
Even for the one just in YT, people automatically say “eeew” if it’s AI-generated, even if not slop.
I think it could. I only recall seeing it for media, but the meaning fits AI code well. Specially dysfunctional code outputted in large quantities.
“Vibe coding” simply lacks that negative connotation, it’s what the people making it call it.
OpenStars@piefed.social 8 hours ago
There are so many interconnected issues there:
I suppose I mostly have heard the phrase “vibe-coding” from its pro-ai proponents, while the anti-slop contingent has not really used a coherent phrase (so far that I have typically seen). I suspect because for coding, people have the expectation that you are supposed to be checking it, so the concern there is mostly on the low quality due to lack of degree of rigorous post-production checking, rather than the theft of input source - although I also suspect that most people have not really though the issue through very in-depth. I know I have not.
Calling poor-quality vibe-coding as “ai slop” could be a great way to shame it! :-P
lvxferre@mander.xyz 48 minutes ago
If I got this right, what most people call “slop” is mass-produced and low quality. Following that definition you could have human-made slop, but it’s less like a low quality meme and more like corporate “art”. Some however seem to be using it exclusively for AI generated content, so for those “human-made slop” would be an oxymoron.
Human reviewing is not directly related to that. Only as far as a human to be expected to remove really junky output, and only let decent stuff in.
Vibe coding actually implies the opposite: you don’t check the output. You tell the bot what you want, it outputs some code, you test that code without checking it, then you ask the bot for further modifications.
That’ll depend on the person. In my opinion, AI usage is mostly okay if:
Key differences: a meme is typically made to be shared, without too many expectations of recognition, people sharing it will likely do it for free, and memes in general take relatively low effort to generate. While the content typically fed into those models is often important for the author/artist, takes a lot more effort to generate, and the people feeding those models typically expect to be paid for them.
Even then note a lot of people hate memes for a reason rather similar to AI output, “it takes space of more interesting stuff”. That’s related to your point #6, labelling makes it a non-issue for people who’d rather avoid consuming AI output as content.
It’s less about intent and more about effect. A pirated copy typically benefits the pirate by a lot, while it only harms the author by a wee bit.
Note I don’t consider piracy as “theft” or “stealing”, but something else. It’s illegal, but not always immoral.