Well, I already provided proof for my experience :) Most of the times there is no further refinement possible. The prompt allows just so and so much keywords. And the AI has its own mindset. I agree that with the right keywords you can get good looking and even awesome results. But most probably completely different from…
Fair point, have you got any examples of where you can point this plagiarism out? I would like to see what this looks like and how different it is from the original, particularly with concept art. I am like a moth to a flame with this tech, while I don't like the lack of consent and acknowledgement to the original artist…
it's stealing their style This part is not copyrighted. And most probably never will. And so it is not stealing. Like you cannot patent a game idea neither.
Yes, i play the devils advocate here, to some degree. Sorry ^^ ... obvious unethical nature of a training model ... It is in the same way ethical and legal than a robot replacing a worker in a factory. In the end the ethic question doesn't even matter. It is about if it is legal. And about if you are still be able to…
It is not your artwork that is published. It is a AI had a look at your image. Then paints in your style. Watercolors for example. Same could have been me, looking at your picture, then use your style. Your content, and everything that you can claim copyright for, is never touched. What you ask for here is that nobody is…
The point is that the model was trained on artwork without the consent of the artists, But that's no crime since you don't need any consent to look at images that are public available. Since they are public available. Looking at other artists work is how an artist learns since humans exists. It was very common in the 19th…
"AI does not use images" and yet above we have near-exact (down to the individual loose hairs hanging down over her forehead) recreations of that famous National Geographic photo down to most details. So how does that happen, if it "doesn't use images"? — images are data; if data is used, the image is used. That's a false…
Oh the topic of AI tool to find infringements, I have no doubt we'll start to see AI tools that do that, look for existing IPs or matching images and define how heavy it's influencing the result. We'll see AI that will give you what prompts to use to create a similar image, effectively making "being good at making prompts"…