OutrageousHairdo

joined 3 years ago
[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 17 points 4 months ago (3 children)

"Your suit has been dismissed for failure to state an actionable claim."

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 5 points 4 months ago

Synthesis: Jill Biden for President.

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 32 points 4 months ago (17 children)

The class war is a war like any other, and most wars I know of were won by having a clear plan of battle and strong leadership.

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 24 points 4 months ago

Leave it to the ninjas to stay silent.

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 39 points 5 months ago (6 children)

Imagine if someone throws up on the vines. How would you ever clean that?

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 13 points 5 months ago (4 children)

Daphne out here warding off enemy men-at-war with her puckle gun

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 22 points 5 months ago (4 children)

Here's the actual video of Skibidi Biden, since I couldn't find it in the article: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m7orWQZ0gPA

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 24 points 5 months ago

This is pure speculation. You can't see into its mind. Commercially implemented AIs have recommended recipes that involve poison in the past, including one for mustard gas, so to give it the benefit of the doubt and assume it was even tangentially correct is giving it more slack than it has earned.

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 41 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Imagine Kamala Harris dashing out of the Senate with a USB key containing all 1,776 of the US Congressional $VOTE tokens.

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 8 points 5 months ago

Because the crypto companies really really wanted them to not be securities and kinda just went "Nahnahnah, I can't hear you!" This is just the SEC slowly working through its backlog because suing an entire industry isn't something it was ever really intended to do.

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 19 points 5 months ago (2 children)

Love how there's no fucking water on the snake. Talk about hydrophobic lmao

[–] OutrageousHairdo@hexbear.net 10 points 5 months ago (2 children)

I gathered as much from the Wikipedia page, but I was curious about the "mentality" being talked about, the psychological aspect, since Wikipedia mostly just discusses basic facts and events.

 
 
 

Before we start, let's just get the basics out of the way - yes, stealing the work of hundreds of thousands if not millions of private artists without their knowledge or consent and using it to drive them out of business is wrong. Capitalism, as it turns out, is bad. Shocking news to all of you liberals, I'm sure, but it's easy to call foul now because everything is wrong at once - the artists are losing their jobs, the slop being used to muscle them out is soulless and ugly, and the money is going to lazy, talentless hacks instead. With the recent implosion of the NFT space, we're still actively witnessing the swan song of the previous art-adjacent grift, so it's easy to be looking for problems (and there are many problems). But what if things were different?

Just to put my cards on the table, I've been pretty firmly against generative AI for a while, but I'm certainly not opposed to using AI or Machine Learning on any fundamental level. For many menial tasks like Optical Character Recognition and audio transcription, AI algorithms have become indispensable! Tasks like these are grunt work, and by no means is humanity worse off for finding ways to automate them. We can talk about the economic consequences or the quality of the results, sure, but there's no fundamental reason this kind of work can't be performed with Machine Learning.

AI art feels... different. Even ignoring where companies like OpenAI get their training data, there are a lot of reasons AI art makes people like me uneasy. Some of them are admittedly superficial, like the strange proportions or extra fingers, but there's more to it than that.

The problem for me is baked into the very premise - making an AI to do our art only makes sense if art is just another task, just work that needs to be done. If sourcing images is just a matter of finding more grist for the mill, AI is a dream come true! That may sound a little harsh, and it is, but it's true. Generative AI isn't really art - art is supposed to express something, or mean something, or do something, and Generative AI is fundamentally incapable of functioning on this wavelength. All the AI works with is images - there's no understanding of ideas like time, culture, or emotion. The entirety of the human experience is fundamentally inaccessible to generative AI simply because experience itself is inaccessible to it. An AI model can never go on a walk, or mow a lawn, or taste an apple, it's just an image generator. Nothing it draws for us can ever really mean anything to us, because it isn't one of us. Often times, I hear people talk about this kind of stuff almost like it's just a technical issue, as if once they're done rooting out the racial bias or blocking off the deepfake porn, then they'll finally have some time to patch in a soul. When artist Jens Haaning mailed in 2 blank canvases titled "Take the Money and Run" to the Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, it was a divisive commentary on human greed, the nature of labor, and the nonsequitir pricing endemic to modern art. The knowledge that a real person at that museum opened the box, saw a big blank sheet, and had to stick it up on the wall, the fact that there was a real person on the other side of that transaction who did what they did and got away with it, the story around its creation, that is the art. If StableDiffusion gave someone a blank output, it'd be reported as a bug and patched within the week.

All that said, is AI image generation fundamentally wrong? Sure, the people trying to make money off of it are definitely skeevy, but is there some moral problem with creating a bunch of dumb, meaningless junk images for fun? Do we get to cancel Neil Cicierega because he wanted to know how Talking Heads frontman David Byrne might look directing traffic in his oversized suit?

Maybe just a teensy bit, at least under the current circumstances.

I'll probably end up writing a part 2 about my thoughts on stuff like data harvesting and stuff, not sure yet. I feel especially strongly about the whole "AI is just another tool" discourse when people are talking about using these big models, so don't even get me started on that.

 

/s

 

A stand-up comedian hired to play Willy Wonka at a widely criticised chocolate factory experience has spoken out after furious parents demanded refunds.

...

“The script was 15 pages of AI-generated gibberish of me just monologuing these mad things."

“The bit that got me was where I had to say, ‘There is a man we don’t know his name. We know him as the Unknown. This Unknown is an evil chocolate maker who lives in the walls.’"

“It was terrifying for the kids. Is he an evil man who makes chocolate or is the chocolate itself evil?"

Video from the performer:
https://twitter.com/CultureCrave/status/1762741478303162690
 
AI "Art" used to advertise the event:
https://twitter.com/CultureCrave/status/1762321599402025303

 

A chatbot used by Air Canada hallucinated an inaccurate bereavement discount policy, and a customer who flew based on this information sued the company over being misled. The small claims court sided with the deceived customer, arguing that the chatbot was acting as an official agent of Air Canada, and that there was no reason a customer should have to double check resources from one part of the Air Canada website against different parts of the same website.

 
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