• regul@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    I have a very dumb cousin and it’s basically all they’ve been sharing lately.

  • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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    7 months ago

    What strikes me as being utterly pathetic is the people posting this AI-generated shit in order to have people praise “their” work. How empty their lives must be if the only ego-boost they can get is Facebook likes for something they’re lying about having made themselves.

    • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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      7 months ago

      It’s definitely for troll farming reasons. Most likely they’re using it to create legit-seeming accounts that they can then sell to a troll farm who will use it to influence a product or an election or something. Using AI to slightly vary content that they already know goes viral easily makes finding new content to share much cheaper.

    • pbjamm@beehaw.org
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      7 months ago

      I wonder how many of the comments are also “AI” whose job is to like and reply with some variation of “WOW! 😍”

    • YuzuDrink@beehaw.org
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      7 months ago

      My best guess is that they’re being posted by click bait farms to sell ads to people who view their pages… though I don’t know enough about Facebook to know if that would actually be possible.

      I don’t want to believe that hundreds of actual people are independently stealing and making variants on this one artist’s work to get fake internet points…

      • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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        7 months ago

        I don’t want to believe that hundreds of actual people are independently stealing and making variants on this one artist’s work to get fake internet points…

        The really sad thing is I can believe that there are hundreds of people that are doing this. I have encountered people who straight up stole other artists’ work and posted it, claiming they made it, in order to get fake internet points. I used to be a moderator on a site that had very strict rules about art theft - used to issue bans for it at least once a week. I can totally believe there are people on that site now using AI images in order to avoid detection.

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    7 months ago

    All of these images are AI-generated, and stolen from an artist named Michael Jones.

    It absolutely is not “stolen” from Michael Jones.

    He made, in real life, a wooden statue of a dog.

    That certainly gives him no exclusive right to make images with a wooden statue of a dog. And he is definitely not the first person to do a carving of a dog in wood; dogs and humans have been around for a long time, and statues of dogs predate writing.

    The problem that someone like Jones has isn’t that people are making images, but that Jones doesn’t have a great way to reliably prove that he created an actual statue; he’s just taking a picture of the thing. Once upon a time, that was a pretty good proof, because it was difficult to create such an image without having created a statue of a dog. Now, it’s not; a camera is no longer nearly as useful as a tool to prove that something exists in the real world.

    So he’s got a technical problem, and there are ways to address that.

    • He could take a video – right now, we aren’t at a point where it’s easy to do a walkaround video, though I assume that we’ll get there.

    • He could get a trusted organization to certify that he made the statue, and reference them. If I’m linking to woodcarvers-international.org, then that’s not something that someone can replicate and claim that they created the thing in real life.

    • It might be possible to create cameras that create cryptographically-signed output, though that’s going to be technically-difficult to make in a way that can’t be compromised.

    But in no case are we going to wind up in a world where people cannot make images of a wooden dog statue – or anything else – because it might make life more difficult for someone who has created a wooden dog to prove that they created that statue in real life.

    • teawrecks@sopuli.xyz
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      7 months ago

      Even if we rewind to before the advent of AI generated images, if someone were to take his photo of his art, and painstakingly use Photoshop to create a believable second image with a different person standing next to it representing it as their own without giving him any credit, we would call that process “stealing”.