• WormFood@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    insightful comment. just one small criticism: there are a lot of artists out there who happen to exist within this capitalist economic system, who need to sell their art for money so that they don’t starve or become homeless. and these people probably don’t want their art and their style to be reproducible by ai because that would threaten their ability to house and feed themselves.

    I’m all in favour of abolishing intellectual property, but only as part of a broader change to our economic system that would allow artists to support themselves without having to worry about ownership. besides, these ai tools aren’t really ‘sharing’ art, they’re just allowing big tech companies to consolidate wealth and power

    finally, your point about art rarity is not really relevant to the discussion, these tools are intended for people distributing digital art, not people speculating on physical art

    • Noo@jlai.lu
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      1 month ago
      • Yes they are afraid to not being able to live, but is the incentive to sell your art or die make them happy ? I doubt it.
      • I’m not for abolishing intellectual property. In fine artist who don’t want to be share shouldn’t, but the fact is most artist aren’t ready to defend their art in court to get their will respected. They prefer to wait for the magical technological miracle that will save them, exactly like the rest of us.
      • Rarity is still a topic here, because in itself selling art online doesn’t bound the file sell to the usage of the person who bought it. AI doesn’t prevent artists to sell their art, but it feels like it didn’t it ? Why ? Because the art is even more largely accessible to commoners and we don’t want that because it is lowering the value of art. But it’s just the financial value of the piece that gets to go down, not the real interesting value.