Not hard when simply recording your strokes and movements on the Operating system of choice is probably the "back-door" to stealing how to achieve aspects of this "a.i.". (terminally online and all that right, never unplug your routers right? to do work? and working in a studio do they stay online always?) Not hard to see…
The idea that ai is doing the same as a person is a stretch. That is because it is using digital copies of existing art. That is like arguing that it is ok for me to take and sell photos of your work, because I combined it with photos of other peoples work to sell. You cannot compress 240 terabyte into 8 gb vram, not even…
I read the transcript, not seeing what this indicates? or how it refutes points made in previous video from the youtube artist. the AI takes an input image (in many cases, a copyrighted image which cannot be reused for commercial purposes without permission). Then it transmogrifies the image and does various other things.…
I understand your concerns. But as told, i don't share it :) But if it is, then one can assume that Adobe was likely clever enough to train it on images that they had the right to use. This is still the point where i heavily disagree. AI does not use Images. And so it does not need a right here. There is not a single…
Did you consider that you just dont know (yet) how to use the AI properly? There is a random component, yes. But you can very well prompt craft and refine until you get the results you want. I was able to combine various elements that I wanted to see. The more specific and the more elements you want, the more difficult it…
"Fair point, have you got any examples of where you can point this plagiarism out?" yes indeed thare are plenty examples by now. the biggest issue right now is not that the tech exists but how its being used right now. the databases that are fed into them are simply just mass crawled from art sites such as deviantArt or…
To be fair, regarding existing tools like content-aware fill : I personally have no idea if the tool is purely an algorithm, or if it does use a model trained on images. But if it is, then one can assume that Adobe was likely clever enough to train it on images that they had the right to use. But perhaps this is irrelevant…
Kinda surprised this thread didn't get bumped with the release of Corridor Digital's Anime Rock Paper Scissors First, I think it's a cool proof of concept and a good demo of where the tech is right now. And the response has been very divisive. People saying they should be sued into bankruptcy, they have no ethics, that…
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…