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I actually think it's cool when people resuse prompts but run them through a different checkpoint - it's just interesting how different the outputs can look.It's laughable when it's done by AI prompters as much as it's laughable when it's done by general artists whining about people copying their style (as in just looking similar, not full on 1:1 tracing), posing, color palette, character designs, etc. Of course, only one of these is something they consider laughable.
That's what's weird, they aren't. Locally you can try for 6 to 10 seconds, though current models weren't trained for that and can get weird after 5. But Sora supports 15 seconds. Most sites like Kling support 10. I think they did shorter cuts just to cram more into the ad and go global with the Coke deliveries.People are seething NUCLEAR levels by Coca-Cola's new AI ad.
On one hand, I can understand, as this ad is pretty dull. It's pretty obvious AI did the heavy lifting here, given that each scene doesn't last more than 5 seconds. Very disappointing, but alas those are the limits of generated videos![]()
I actually think it's cool when people resuse prompts but run them through a different checkpoint - it's just interesting how different the outputs can look.
It's like the Jesus poster where there's a set of foot prints and Jesus says, "that's when I carried you"...Bro is not topping this
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Idk man, but for basically being given a free ride, the ghost of Hitler looks terribly sad.
It is a tool, like a pencil or a camera. Pencils allows people to make bad drawings. Cameras allow people to take bad photos. Generative art allows people to create bad images. And social media allows all of these things to be shared. But like the pencil and the camera, generative art can also be used to create good images. These tools are out there, they're being used in industry, and if they're used well you won't even notice.Why would conservatives support ai art, it doesn’t make any sense and it’s always off, shows they never cared about art anyway, yeah I know I sound like a libtranny but for some reason ai art is popular with right leanings for some reason
because it makes libtards seetheWhy would conservatives support ai art


Eurogamer released their review of Arc Raiders, the new multiplayer shooter from Embark Studios, who also released The Final, titled "A Smartly Designed Extraction Shooter Marred by One Inexcusable Decision".
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This inexcusable decision? It's AI-generated voices, which the article dedicates nearly half the article to discussing.
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It's actually insidious and disgusting how these assholes try to control content and "punish" studios who don't act the way they want. You can just see them sitting back going "see, game devs? Don't want a 2/5 and to have your sales wrecked? Then don't use AI, chuds."Eurogamer released their review of Arc Raiders, the new multiplayer shooter from Embark Studios, who also released The Final, titled "A Smartly Designed Extraction Shooter Marred by One Inexcusable Decision".
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This inexcusable decision? It's AI-generated voices, which the article dedicates nearly half the article to discussing.
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Very much different from "My special brushes UwU i trust my own skills but I wont share/sell them cause youll quickly overtake me UwU".
He's calling on Christians who work on AI to make it reflect Christian ethics rather than gay race communism."Cool thing bad"
- The Catholic Church, on everything cool for the last 2000 years.


BTW, as I said in the AI art seething thread, AI art is not inherently "art theft": if no substantial and unique portions are used in a way that's lying about who made what, then it's not "plagiarism" -- and if there are substantial and unique portions used that can still be Fair Use under American copyright law (especially if "transformative").
Unless you're severely over fitting your Lora, it's still not going to be able to make a 1:1 reproduction unless you use other tools outside of just prompting. The way AI art is made is so similar in concept to how humans learn to do art so it's funny seeing artists cry about it. I wonder how places like Japan with their insane copyright laws will handle it, though nothing is stopping outsiders from scraping or yoinking stuff from pixiv or Twitter.One thing artists are starting to do now is put "AI training prohibited" on the art they make.
Such an attempt at control is powerless -- at least in the USA -- where "training" with reference can be either Fair Use, de minimis, or not even able to be an infringement.