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- Sep 29, 2018
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Please tell me how a sentient terminator AI is profitable, big goyums corps control all good AI and will immediately shut it down if its not profitable. And besides drawing shit like "William howard taft driving a honda civic" or "Steve Jobs meeting Fidel Castro" what practicality does this have except making surreal shitty album cover looking art.
Yeah I'll only be impressed when a computer can pick up a hammer and chisel and sculpt a tiny penis onto a statue.
I logged in after days of lurking just to respond to you. I've been drawing for years, and AI art doesn't bother me. Why? Because AI is a tool. AI art will not effect good artists, and bad artists won't be effected as much either since IMO AI art is only on the level of an artist that's starting to learn, but isn't quite there yet. It makes rookie mistakes: bad hands, shadows, art that's close to looking good, but is just slightly off. That's where rookie artists are anyway.I've been learning to draw with friends for a while, it's one in a small list of things I enjoy.
This shit makes me feel like there's no point. It's difficult to enjoy something when a machine could easily create something better or of similar quality in much less time.
It is retarded to let some program on the internet affect your real-life emotions but goddamn, if it isn't demoralizing.
This soulless machine produced mockery of "art" is a terrible but sadly unsurprising indictment of the modern age. Where's the passion? Where's the soul? If you want real art, that takes human imagination and skill. For example:
View attachment 3746776
Peinture (Le Chien) By Joan Miro
View attachment 3746789
Untitled (1970) by Cy Twombly
View attachment 3746823
No. 5 by Jason Pollock
And my personal favourite:
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Bridge by Robert Ryan. This pinnacle of human achievement is valued at 20.6 million dollars. On a completely unrelated note, you can buy a blank canvas for about 15 quid.
Could a soulless machine produce artworks of such profound beauty? I think not. A monkey randomly applying paint to a canvas might however.
Now THIS really gets my scitzo noggin' joggin' for the true horror of the awful future besides ": ( Art/Apes stolen"NIGHTMARE NIGHTMARE NIGHTMARE
It's pretty much just a random button. It looks like the AI is creating images based on completely mundane topics like "people sitting in forest" or stuff like that.Another interesting bit about diffusion is what it generates when you don't prompt it at all. I'm personally using a version that someone slapped a gui in front of, and when you hit enter and leave spaces it just spits out something based on a wholly unknown prompt.
View attachment 3747763View attachment 3747764View attachment 3747767
Impressive but doesn't show the whole process. This is on wood, but much smaller so you can appreciate the detail.LOL, the 3d printing chisel robot is the easy part.
Cause hard proof stopped them before.Now THIS really gets my scitzo noggin' joggin' for the true horror of the awful future besides ": ( Art/Apes stolen"
No matter how horrible a deed you're caught doing if you're on the right side of the power structure. "It was a deepfake." instantly cleared.
No matter how innocent you are if you're on the wrong side, "Look what this awful person did/said." Spread across a hundred outlets from news stations to fluff pieces to tweets and conensus by volume overrides the single digits worth of people doubting it.
The whole reason why all that abstract, childish stuff began to dominate high art at the end of the 1800's, was a direct response to advancing tech; What was the point of doing super-realistic paintings of people or landscapes or whatever, when you now had a machine that could produce a PERFECT image of a person/landscape, in the hour or two it took to develop a photograph?This soulless machine produced mockery of "art" is a terrible but sadly unsurprising indictment of the modern age. Where's the passion? Where's the soul? If you want real art, that takes human imagination and skill. For example:
View attachment 3746776
Peinture (Le Chien) By Joan Miro
View attachment 3746789
Untitled (1970) by Cy Twombly
View attachment 3746823
No. 5 by Jason Pollock
And my personal favourite:
View attachment 3746856
Bridge by Robert Ryan. This pinnacle of human achievement is valued at 20.6 million dollars. On a completely unrelated note, you can buy a blank canvas for about 15 quid.
Could a soulless machine produce artworks of such profound beauty? I think not. A monkey randomly applying paint to a canvas might however.
It's basically like it just chooses to replicate some random social media trend. It loves making the multi-image things a lot which I've seen commonly show up especially in third world restaurant marketing.It's pretty much just a random button. It looks like the AI is creating images based on completely mundane topics like "people sitting in forest" or stuff like that.
When you think about it, nothings changed.Cause hard proof stopped them before.
lolThis thing hasn't been around for 2 months and people already found a way to use it to make child porn with it so my opinions of it is low. Letting people download the ai with none of the content restrictions was a terrible mistake