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PoastRotato

Mash 'em, boil 'em, stick 'em in a centrifuge

Posts
1
Comments
100
Joined
2 yr. ago
  • I recognize this art! And this comic! It was drawn by Red, one of the two main hosts on the Overly Sarcastic Productions youtube channel. For those who don't know, she and her cohost Blue make funny videos detailing myths and mythological figures (this is mostly Red's content) as well as history (this is Blue's area), along with plenty of other edutainment content. One of my favorites is her video on Loki and how his role as a mythological character morphed and twisted wildly throughout the centuries.

    Anyway, it's super cool to see her art here!

  • I feel like that's the free space at the center of the card

  • Maybe I'm getting too deep into semantics at this point, but I would argue that art created without emotion is not art, it's a product. Like I said, art expresses something. Maybe it's something banal, or trivial, but it's still something. AI art doesn't express anything, it's purely mechanical - you put something in, you get something out. The whole is never any greater than the sum of its parts.

    Here's another analogy for you: Let's say you take that one old saying literally and you leave a (presumably immortal) monkey in a room with a typewriter for a million years, then you come back to find that it has written Shakespeare. You could read the play and be impressed that the experiment worked, but you couldn't actually engage with the content in any meaningful way because you know there is no content. You couldn't say, "What do you suppose the monkey meant by, 'All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players'?", because the monkey didn't mean anything by it. The monkey had no intention behind this "art"; it just did monkey shit for a million years and happened to accidentally create Shakespeare. AI art is a lot like that, except AI works way, way faster than a monkey, which is why it doesn't take it a million years for it to create something that sounds like Shakespeare, just a few minutes.

    Having said that, I do also think people react the way they do to AI art because it forces them to confront the deeply existential question of what it means to be human, and if it even means anything at all. Seeing AI do something so distinctly human as creating art, and doing it in such a distinctly human way, makes us wonder if we're not all just machines made out of meat. If AI is indistinguishable from human intelligence, then the reverse must also be true: Human intelligence is indistinguishable from AI. And that itself raises all kinds of uncomfortable questions about life, purpose, morality, etc.

  • Art is a record of emotion; it exists to express something felt by the creator. When we look at art, we often feel connected in some way to whatever the creator was feeling when they made it. But AI doesn't feel anything; it just takes inputs and produces something that its machine learning algorthm thinks it will be rewarded for. It's like if you had a very deep and meaningful conversation with someone online, only to later find out you were being catfished; it leaves you feeling hollow inside. Sure, you could argue that the conversation itself still had some meaning to you even if your partner was disingenuous, but it destroys the veneer of sentiment and human connection surrounding it, casting it in a much darker light. And if you strip away the connection and sentiment from art, what do you even have left?

    This is of course to say nothing of the massive amounts of theft from other human artists that AI art is built upon, but I feel that's not really what you were asking.

  • me_irl

  • To the credit of the image, I feel like most humans wouldn't fare well in a washing machine either

  • This is great until someone takes this and runs with it in the opposite direction, claiming this is "proof" women are made for doing laundry and other household chores

  • New Magnus Archives headcanon just dropped

  • This is how you turn Death Note into a comedy

  • I respect you as a human being but I wanna take this opinion out back and shoot it

  • His first mistake was going to a dentist who writes "Doctor's Office" on his door

  • Bonus points if you scribble in a "le Walmart" with a sharpie

  • Yes, but nuclear forces are strong enough to keep the space within from expanding and hold the objects together. It's in the vast swathes of emptiness between galaxies that we typically see the exansion of space because gravity is too weak there to keep things together.

  • Most of the universe is empty space, and that's what's expanding. Empty space doesn't have any gravitational pull

  • flatbear

  • A flat bear is what you get when a drop bear misses its target

  • That's not a "never"

  • I know you're joking but you basically just suggested buying a pack of frozen mixed veggies so you can pick out and use only the carrots for your stew, and the idea of someone actually doing that sends my brain into a tailspin

  • I love the voice change, it makes it sound like it's saying the item with massive air quotes so suddenly everything sounds like a euphemism for something terrible

  • Showerthoughts @lemmy.world
    PoastRotato @lemmy.world

    It's almost impossible to deny being an alcoholic without sounding like an alcoholic