Culture DeviantArt Gets Condemned for Promoting AI-Generated Content - The platform's recent Twitter post dedicated to a seller of AI images didn't sit well with real artists. (March 21st, 2024)

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Article / Archive on March 21st, 2024 [EDITOR'S NOTE: Some tweets are a bit unsized. Couldn't fix.]

While most online platforms dedicated to digital art are now focusing on combating the ever-growing scourge of AI-generated images, or, at the very least, making it easier for users to remove artificially created content from their feeds, it appears that some websites decided to opt for a contrasting approach and support "the next big thing" instead of real human artists.
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One such platform is DeviantArt, which recently found itself under fire following the publication of a Twitter post promoting one of the website's "top sellers", a user known as Mikonotai, who allegedly raked in more than $12,000 on DeviantArt in 2023 alone.

What the post failed to mention, however, is that Mikonotai is not a real artist as one could mistakenly assume, but rather an AI enthusiast who generates their images using Midjourney and Stable Diffusion and then sells them in bulk using DA as nothing more than a digital store.

Following its publication, the post in question quickly got a community note from Twitter, which added much necessary context by highlighting that Mikonotai is a generative "artist" and not a real one. Additionally, the note pointed out that most of the seller's images are priced at less than $10, casting doubt on DeviantArt's claim of Mikonotai's $12K earnings last year.
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Needless to say, DeviantArt's decision to highlight generative content didn't sit well with the larger community of Digital Artists, which condemned the platform in the comments, describing such a promotion as fraudulent and outright offensive:
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Apparently, the platform's SMM department is currently on damage control, hiding many of the comments under the original Twitter post:
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Despite the flurry of criticism DeviantArt faced, the Twitter post in question is still available as of now and can be accessed by clicking this link.

This situation demonstrates that despite the growth of the generative AI industry, real artists aren't going to give up easily and will continue to fight against the machine in this ongoing "cold war" between humans and artificial intelligence.

Regarding the Humans vs. AI conflict, there has been a notable development recently as the carbon-based side secured a major win by passing the world's first law limiting AIs in the European Union. With overwhelming support from 523 votes, the new law aims to safeguard human rights by assigning obligations to AI systems based on their potential risks and levels of impact.
 
ever-growing scourge of AI-generated images
What the post failed to mention, however, is that Mikonotai is not a real artist as one could mistakenly assume, but rather an AI enthusiast who generates their images using Midjourney and Stable Diffusion
Glad to see the writer is taking a nuanced, impartial view on the matter here.

People can wade into the tide and scream at the ocean, but it's only going to keep coming in.
 
I'm not fully on board with AI, but a lot of DA artists use Photoshop and tablets, devices that help you to correct lot of mistakes that wouldn't pass easily if you're using only your hands and pencil. When my cousin studied architecture, he had to draw straight lines by hand as requirement of Drawing 101. Now, software straightens your trace.
 
AI is mostly a threat to corporate levels where the people were never valued to begin with. If you make art people want to buy, they still will buy it from you because they value creation from a creator. I doubt much of that $12K came from other artist audiences who canceled commissions for a cheaper outlet. In fact, I'd wager most to all came from people who can't afford (literally or in good conscious) to spend $50+ on artwork (a good 4x if porn is counted).
 
I'm not fully on board with AI, but a lot of DA artists use Photoshop and tablets, devices that help you to correct lot of mistakes that wouldn't pass easily if you're using only your hands and pencil. When my cousin studied architecture, he had to draw straight lines by hand as requirement of Drawing 101. Now, software straightens your trace.
Yeah. What about the general world of e-thottery and things like Facetune and automatic Photoshop adjustments? That's certainly deceptive and not real.
 
Deviantart should of been condemned long ago for being a shitty website full of garbage ontop of having one of the worst UIs ever
The UI has gotten worse over the years; they got rid of categories to organize what your work falls under. For example, non-isometric pixel art was separated from isometric pixel art, and mixed media was its own category separate from work done purely with pastels or watercolor pencils.

That was one of the stupidest things they ever did, in my opinion.
 
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Faggots don't remember the 2014 April Fool's that was all AI-generated (albeit limited to I think 10 or 15 images that was randomly assigned to you) through thoughtART.
Everyone worth a shit had long since left by that point, so they might not have been aware of the 2014 gag.

However, it wouldn't surprise me if a good chunk of whiners didn't have an account at that point.
 
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Thanks to what I assume is all the AI users on DA using the same images to train their program on, all AI generated art on that platform comes off looking samey and easily-identifiable as AI output.

You may get fooled momentarily by a thumbnail, but, once you see it full size? Its obvious you're dealing with AI.

hardly a "scourge" , more like it's own category at this point..... most people mad at it are mad on principle and not because the AI is directly aping their style well enough to pass as original.
 
These online artist's are really overreacting when it comes to A.I art. Good artist's aren't really going to suffer if they have an art style that differentiates from the rest of the competition. A.I art also has this strange look most of the time to the point where it's very easy to point out that it wasn't created by a real person.
 
Know what a real deviantartist creates? Collages of a bunch of stolen images with faggoty shit like "what if (anime character X) was played by (western cartoon character X)?" Or put a couple dozen characters in front of a stadium or fast food place and you do that four thousand times that's a true deviantartist.
 
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