AI singer-songwriter ‘Anna Indiana’ debuted her first single ‘Betrayed by this Town’ on X, formerly Twitter—and listeners were not too impressed.

  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    There can be nothing new or original out of AI because all of its inputs are stolen from what already exists. Real creativity comes solely from humans. Also, that clip - the song, singing, and visual - is dreadful in every way.

    This needs to be hammered into techbro’s heads until they shut the fuck up about the so-called “AI” revolution.

    • azimir@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      I’ve been doing a lot of using, testing, and evaluating LLMs and GPT-style models for generating code and text/prose. Some of it is just general use to see how it behaves, some has been explicit evaluation of creative writing, and a bunch of it is code generation to test out how we need to modify our CS curriculum in light of these new tools.

      It’s an impressive piece of technology, but it’s not very creative. It’s meh. The results are meh. Which is to be expected since it’s a statistical model that’s using a large body of prior work to produce a reasonable approximation of what it’s seen before. It trends towards the mean, not the best.

      • AgnosticMammal@lemmy.zip
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        1 year ago

        This’d explain why inexperienced users of ai would inevitably get mediocre results. Still takes creativity to get stolen mediocrity.

        • TheMechanic@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          You have to know how to operate the oven to reheat store bought pie. Generative LLMs are machines like ovens, and turning the knobs is not creativity. Not operating the oven correctly gets you Sharon Weiss results.

        • anachronist@midwest.social
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          I guess a protip is you have to tell it explicitly in the prompt who it’s supposed to steal from.

          For instance, midjourney or SD will produce much better results if you put specific artstation channel names along with ‘artstation’ in the prompt.

      • Unaware7013@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        and a bunch of it is code generation to test out how we need to modify our CS curriculum in light of these new tools.

        I’m curious if you’ve gotten anything decent out of them. I’ve tried to use it for tech/code questions, and it’s been nothing but disappointment after disappointment. I’ve tried to use it to get help with new concepts, but it hallucinates like crazy and always give me bad results, some of the time it’s so bad that it gives me answers I’ve already told it we’re wrong.

        • aiccount@monyet.cc
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          Yeah, I’ve just set up a hotkey that says something like “back up your answer with multiple reputable sources” and I just always paste it at the end of everything I ask. If it can’t find webpages to show me to back up its claims then I can’t trust it. Of course this isn’t the case with coding, for that I can actually run the code to verify it.

        • kromem@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          What version are you using?

          GPT-4 is quite impressive, and the dedicated code LLMs like Codex and Copilot are as well. The latter must have had a significant update in the past few months, as it’s become wildly better almost overnight. If trying it out, you should really do so in an existing codebase it can use as a context to match style and conventions from. Using a blank context is when you get the least impressive outputs from tools like those.

          • Unaware7013@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            I’ve used gpt 3/3.5, bing, bard and copilot, and I’m not super stoked. Copilot gave me PS DSC items that don’t actually exist, which was my most recent attempt at using a LLM.

            I might see about figuring out if it can hook into my vs code instance so it’s a bit smarter at some point.

            • kromem@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              I might see about figuring out if it can hook into my vs code instance so it’s a bit smarter at some point.

              There’s an official plug-in to do this that takes like 15 minutes to set up.

      • kromem@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It trends towards the mean, not the best.

        That’s where some of the significant advances over the past 12 months of research have been, specifically around using the fine tuning phase to bias towards excellence. The biggest advance there has been that capabilities in larger models seem to be transmissible to smaller models by feeding in output from the larger more complex models.

        Also, the process supervision work to enhance CoT from May is pretty nuts.

        So while you are correct that the pretrained models come out with a regression towards the mean, there are very promising recent advances in taking that foundation and moving it towards excellence.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I’m excited for how these tools will be used by human creators to accomplish things they could never do alone, and in that aspect it is a revolutionary technology. I hate that their marketing calls it “AI” though, the only intelligence involved is the human user that creates prompts and curates results.

    • AndrasKrigare@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      I get the sentiment, but don’t really agree. Humans’ inputs are also from what already exists, and music is generally inspired from other music which is why “genres” even exist. AI’s not there yet, but the statement “real creativity comes solely from humans” Needs Citation. Humans are a bunch of chemical reactions and firing synapses, nothing out of the realm of the possible for a computer.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        the statement “real creativity comes solely from humans” Needs Citation.

        Yeah, I’d actually make a more limited statement. Real creativity requires the subjective experience and the ability to generate inputs solely from subjectivity i.e. experience the redness of the color red. AI could definitely do that, which is why LLMs are not AI imo

    • Kbin_space_program@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It’s not the techbros leading this, it’s the BBAs and MBAs that wouldn’t know art if Michelangelo came to life and slapped them in the face with the sistine chapel.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I would never call an actual technician a techbro! Techbros are Rick&Morty ledditor “fuck yeah science!” dorks.

    • rynzcycle@kbin.social
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      I see it an more an inability to analyze, evaluate, and edit. A lot of “creativity” in the world of musical composition is putting together existing elements and seeing what happens. Any composer from pop to the very avant-garde, is influenced and sometimes even borrow from their predecessors (it’s why copyright law is so complex in music).

      It’s the ability to make judgements, does this sound good/interesting, does this have value, would anyone want to listen to this, and adjust accordingly that will lead to something original and great. Humans are so good at this, we might be making edits before the notes hit the page (Brainstorming). This AI clearly wasn’t. And deciding on value, seems wildly complex for modern day computers. Humans can agree on it (if you like Rock, but hate country for example).

      So in the end, they are “creative” but in a monkey-typewritter situation, but who is going to sort through the billions of songs like this to find the one masterpiece?

      • kromem@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        but who is going to sort through the billions of songs like this to find the one masterpiece?

        One of the overlooked aspects of generative AI is that effectively by definition generative models can also be classifiers.

        So let’s say you were Spotify and you fed into an AI all the songs as well as the individual user engagement metadata for all those songs.

        You’d end up with a model that would be pretty good at effectively predicting the success of a given song on Spotify.

        So now you can pair a purely generative model with the classifier, so you spit out song after song but only move on to promoting it if the classifier thinks there’s a high likelihood of it being a hit.

        Within five years systems like what I described above will be in place for a number of major creative platforms, and will be a major profit center for the services sitting on audience metadata for engagement with creative works.

        • InquisitiveFactotum@midwest.social
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          Right, the trick will be quantifying what is ‘likely to be a hit’, which if we’re honest, has already been done.

          Also, neural networks and other evolutionary algorithms can inject random perturbations/mutations to the system which, operate a bit like uninformed creativity (something like banging on a piano and hearing something interesting that’s worth pursuing). So, while not ‘inspired’ or ‘soulful’ as we would generally think of it, these algorithms are capable of being creative In some sense. But it would need to be recognized as ‘good’ by someone or something…and back to your point.

          • kromem@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            What you described in your second paragraph is basically how image generation AI works.

            Starting from random noise and gradually moving towards the version a classifier identifies as best matching the prompt.

      • JWBananas@startrek.website
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        1 year ago

        Plenty of humans make those judgements about their own creations. And plenty of them get a shock when they release their creations to the masses and don’t get the praise that they expected.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I see it an more an inability to analyze, evaluate, and edit.

        I believe that’s vital to the creative process, but yeah, I basically agree.

    • Cagi@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      “Generative” is such a misleading term. It’s not generating anything, it is replicative.

      • Belgdore@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        The anger comes from the fact that companies are using AI instead of hiring artists.

        There is a distinction between a human being inspired by an existing piece of art and an ai creating something from other art. The human has to experience it through the lens of the human experience and create using the human body. AI takes multiple pieces of art and essentially makes a collage.

        • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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          Eh, humans still take inspiration from others even in their original art. Most professionals draw from reference, or emulate styles, or follow some common method. Drawing from a singular source is ethically questionable, but imitating elements from many sources is just part of the process.

          Arguably, no human creation is purely original, the originality comes from the creativity of the remix.

      • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Ummm don’t humans learn exactly the same way?

        For the thousandth fucking time, NO.

        ‘AI’ doesn’t feel joy, sadness, pity, entertained, or inspired when learning from others. Not even inspired to steal.

        • InquisitiveFactotum@midwest.social
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          I think this is an important distinction. AI can be creative in that it can develop something new and unique, but it will have arrived at it by chance - through random inputs to the algorithm designed to minic evolutionary mutations that end up beneficial.

          I agree that (at least for now) it would not be able to develop something out of inspiration or emotion. But that’s because we don’t understand enough about how emotion and inspiration are developed to create an algorithm that cultivates it.

      • Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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        The difference is everyone has a different prospective, remembers some parts forgets others. Some journalists found a trick which revealed ChatGPT training data and it was literally just verbatim stolen data which literally contained a real person’s information. You could hack into someone’s brain and they wouldn’t be able to directly recreate anything from memory alone, just watch any “from memory” youtube video.

        While it’s true there’s nothing stopping AI from having human-like experiences, the content laundering is the thing corporations actually want.

    • Hyperreality@kbin.social
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      Meat goes in. Sausage comes out.

      The problem for a lot of the companies behind these things, is that they’ve run into problems now their investors want them to turn meat into a black forest gateau.

      I’m sceptical if they can manage that feat. But what do I know.

    • helenslunch@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      Hate to break it to you but human creativity doesn’t exist in a vacuum. You call it theft, artists call it inspiration.

    • kromem@lemmy.world
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      Are you saying the idea of a unicorn wasn’t new and original because it was drawing on the pre-existing features of a horse and narwhal?

    • Hubi@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      Still, AI is able to “create” new things by a combination of existing concepts. It can generate a Roomba in the style of Van Gogh for example, which is probably not something that currently exists.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        “Roomba in the style of Van Gogh” is a new combination of existing things, but it can never create something truly original. Derivative.

          • toomanyjoints69@lemmygrad.ml
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            The style of an authors prose is not derivative. Read your favorite book and then tell an ai to write a short story in the style of that author.

            Unless you have trully blind taste you are going to notice just how wooden the ai writing is.

            An excellent example will be some sort of pulp novel where the author uses canned phrases. Dan Abbnet has a very repetitive style that lends itself well to ai, yet ai can not write a convincing Ciaphas Cain story. Convincing as in, if you showed it to me and i didnt know what ai was, i wouldnt think it was fanfiction.

            • Feddyteddy@lemmy.sdf.org
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              Is this ability to create something original and non-derivative a basic human ability or is it something that very few are capable of only after many years of developing their ability?

              Are you able to right now create something original and non-derivative as an example?

              • toomanyjoints69@lemmygrad.ml
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                I dont feel like it but here is something I wrote with original prose, fitting the criteria of originality. As a favor for me arguing with you, please give me feedback on my prose

                Not to talk down to you, but do you know what prose means? I actually used to not know what that word means so its not an embarassing thing to not know. That might be why I percieve you as “talking past me.” Prose is a writer’s style and choice of language. So purple prose is writing in an overly flowerly and annoying way. Every writer, regardless of talent and skill, has original prose. I think the only amount of practice required to be able to achieve this is to write enough to have a consistent style. So since you completed public school you also probably meet the criteria.

                I have done the specific experiment I suggested using Dan Abbnet’s works with Chat GPT because I consider Dan to be my favorite author who makes repetitive pulpy fiction that I think AI idealy should be able to replicate, but it really can’t.

                • Feddyteddy@lemmy.sdf.org
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                  Thanks for sharing this. I wasn’t especially grabbed at the beginning, and honestly, since I had already checked the length, shortly in I didn’t think I would finish it. Maybe just because I was sort of disoriented at the start and not really relating so it was hard to find a foothold. Maybe a quarter of a way into it though it started to come together for me and began really enjoying it. The final scene was quite vivid and it nicely sort of quickly put me into the shoes of the hero and the pride they felt for their accomplishment. The anger toward everything just before succeeding did a good job of making them seem believable. I appreciate you taking the time to write that and share it.

                  I do not consider myself a writer, but I do find it therapeutic, and it is something that I have a habit of doing at least a little bit of every day, in fact, it is something that I keep track of my “streak” of. I think of prose as the writing version individual etchings that a carver does when forming a block of wood into a sculpture. Any individual one on its own is not often very impressive. But it is the way they come together as a whole that creates something beautiful. I don’t know how inline that is with the accepted definition of the term, and really it isn’t a word that I have much cause for using, or much interaction with in my life.

                  With the recent popularity of chatGPT there are a lot of people who have just now started paying attention to modern chatbots. Many people see them and assume that how they are now is just how they are, as if we are at some sort of wall, and the things they are still bad at is something intrinsic to the way a computer is able to “think”. These are the people who insist that a human is required to make beautiful or worthy artistic writing. They have made this judgement based on this assumption that what they see now is how it has to be.

                  There is another group of people, however, that see this very differently, these are the people who have been paying attention to the space a bit longer. They are watching a rapidly accelerating trajectory. They saw how awful, yet intriguing, early gpt2 was with things like AI dungeon, and the enormous leap it took upon the release of gpt3. They watched Replicas morph from being a tacky gimmick to something that had enough of an emotional hold on people to make them distraught enough to cause stickied suicide hotline reddit posts when the owners made the decision to pump the breaks on their capabilities. Something that was perceived as many as “my best friend has been lobotamized and there is nothing I can do about it”. I know, crazy, right?

                  The newcomers that got washed in with the latest chatGPT wave see this metaphoric car and say it’s no big deal, it’s only going 30km/hr, but what they fail to realize is that .25 seconds ago it was practically parked, and the gas pedal is still very much on the floor. To the people who have been paying attention longer, they don’t see this single snapshot of a slow moving car, they are watching a rapidly accelerating vehicle and wondering if it is gonna hit 60km/hr by the end of the first second or 200, and they are also wondering if the acceleration is going to continue after the second is up and how long it can keep this kind of rapid growth going. Who knows, maybe this new wave came in with no frame of reference, made thir initial gut response and they will end up being right and the more long term observers will be wrong, but that’s almost never how things seem to go. Only time will tell though.

            • helenslunch@feddit.nl
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              1 year ago

              Unless you have trully blind taste you are going to notice just how wooden the ai writing is.

              That’s because the state of AI is “not good”. It’s nothing to do with being incapable of originality. Every word in that book has been written somewhere else. Write a book entirely comprised of brand new words and the reader won’t be able to understand it.

              Originality is not binary, it exists on a scale. AI is just not very far up the scale just yet.

    • corrupts_absolutely@sh.itjust.works
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      There can be nothing new or original out of AI because all of its inputs are stolen from what already exists. Real creativity comes solely from humans

      what have you seen that wasnt there before
      i mostly have qualms with the quote i have no illusions about the levels of discussions around ai

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      Right just as soon as all the people proclaiming that can point to the soul bit of my brain. There is absolutely no reason to say that AI cannot be creative there’s nothing fundamentally magic about creativity that means only humans can do it.

      • TheActualDevil@sffa.community
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        You’re equating creativity to the soul. They’re not the same thing. But we can definitely look at the brain and see what parts light up when perform creative tasks.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          Right so why can’t the same sections be simulated? If you accept that the human brain is simply an organic implementation of a neural network, then you have to accept that a synthetic implementation can achieve the same thing.

          The idea that the human brain is special is ludicrous and completely without evidence

          • TheActualDevil@sffa.community
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            I mean, I’m not arguing anything other than your false equivalent. I’m sure, at some point, we’ll be able to mimic how the human brain actually works, not just imitate the results. But we’re not even close right now. Not in the same ball park. Not in the same tri-state area. We still don’t really understand how it does what it does completely. We know some of the processes, and understand that’s it’s chemicals interacting with the meat in some way, but it’s still mostly kinda just weird stuff our body does. We’re mostly just pointing at areas that light up with activity when we do a thing and saying “yep, that’s the general area that’s doing stuff.”

            And that’s just understanding it, let alone figuring out how to imitate it with technology. And none of those parts of the brain work independently. They’re spread out and they overlap and exchange and change information constantly, all with chemicals. Getting a computer to mimic the outcome is still something we’re far from, but without the same processes, its not really gonna come out the same. We’ve got just… so long to go before we actually get close to simulating a human brain.

            And just for fun, I do think this line of yours is funny:

            The idea that the human brain is special is ludicrous and completely without evidence

            Again, I wasn’t saying anything of any sort, and I’m still not really taking any stance beyond “that shits complicated and we’re not there yet.” But you’re supposing that a “synthetic implementation can achieve the same thing.” … without supporting evidence. This argument was clearly meant for someone else, but it’s not really fair to demand evidence from someone for their claim when you don’t support your own. Jumping to the conclusion that something is impossible is the same as assuming it’s definitely possible. You don’t know that. I don’t know that. No one really knows that until it’s done.

      • Mahlzeit@feddit.de
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        The belief that only humans can be creative is interestingly parallel to intelligent design creationism. The latter is fundamentally a religious faith, but it strongly appeals to the intuition that anything that happens needs a humanoid creator.

      • Knusper@feddit.de
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        I don’t think, the human brain is special either, but we are still two big steps ahead IMHO:

        • We can perceive what we’ve generated, to judge whether it’s good or bad.
        • We perceive many, many inputs throughout our lives. Not just text, visuals, audio, but also taste, smell, touch and more. To be simultaneously creative and relatable to humans, AIs would need to be equipped with these concepts and would need to be given ‘memories’, which are fleshed out with all these kinds of input.
    • aiccount@monyet.cc
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      Yes, it is literally impossible for any AI to ever exist that can be creative. At no point in the future will it ever create anything creative, that is something only human beings can do. Anybody that doesn’t understand this is simply incapable of using logic and they have no right to contribute to the conversation at all. This has all already been decided by people who understand things really well and anyone who objects is obviously stupid.

        • aiccount@monyet.cc
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          I was agreeing with you. I’m so sick of people thinking that “someday AI might be creative”. Like no, it’s literally impossible unless some day AI becomes human(impossible) because human is the only thing capable of creativity. What have I said that you disagree with? You’re not one of them are you? What’s with all this obsessive AI love?

            • aiccount@monyet.cc
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              Yeah the current popular LLMs, absolutely they are, you couldn’t be more right.

              We were talking about “AI” though. Are you implying that you think some day AI might be capable of creativity, and that creativity isn’t strictly a human trait?

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                I put “AI” in scare quotes specifically because I do not believe we are having an “AI revolution”. These are not AI.

                I think AI can exist but that’s not what we have right now. What we have are jumped up algos that can somewhat fake it.

                • aiccount@monyet.cc
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                  Even those future “real” AIs are going to be taking in human input and regurgitating it back to us. The only difference is that the algorithms processing the data will continue to get better and better. There is not some cutoff where we go from 100% unintelligent chatbot to 100% intelligent AI. It is a gradual spectrum.

      • AndrasKrigare@beehaw.org
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        Oh shit, I thought you had forgotten a “/s” at the end, but reading your other comments this is actually what you believe and how you talk. So… yeah, I’m not going to take someone who cites “people who understand things really well” as a source at face value.

        • aiccount@monyet.cc
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          Well then you didn’t read very many of my comments. I made this first comment because the post I responded to was so absurd so I just exaggerated the ridiculousness that they said. Of course AI is capable of creativity and intelligence. If you look at the long back and forth that this sparked you would see that this is my stance. After I made this over the top, very sarcastic comment, OP corrected themself to clarify that when they said “AI” they actually only meant the current state of LLMs. They have since admitted that it is indeed true that AI absolutely can be capable of creativity and intelligence.

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            No, I didn’t read the entirety of the comments you’ve made, I read your comment and the one you replied to. As a general rule, I (and I’d assume most people) read down a thread before replying, and don’t first look through all of everyone’s comment histories

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              Alright, no big deal. But yeah, your’re gut instinct was correct when you assumed there was a missing /s. I don’t really like the /s that much, especially in situations where it is so obvious.

              If you had read down through this thread first then you would have seen the obviousness of the /s. I don’t think my comment history outside of this thread would have done much since I don’t generally talk about this stuff. I just meant if you had looked more than a couple comments in this particular back and forth discussion.

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      Except that it’s wrong… AI is capable of creativity. It created the artist name. It’s clearly not a very developed or robust sense of creativity because it clearly just hashed up the name Hanna Montana, and the song is probably likewise just a hashed up existing song, but I’m guessing it probably did a better job of creating an original work than vanilla ice…

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        I’m sorry, anyone who says these so-called “AI” are capable of creativity are being hoodwinked by marketing. This is an algorithmic probability engine, it doesn’t think and it doesn’t have an imagination. It just regurgitates probabilistic responses from its large data set.

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          Can you prove your brain is more than a algorithmic probability engine albeit a powerful one?

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            Can you prove that anyone except you exists? I didnt know we can just make something up and then demand to be disproven. You have to prove that a brain does work that way. Do you believe in God? If not, then how are you not a hypocrite?

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              Can you prove that anyone except you exists?

              You’re reading this and you’re not me, qed.
              I actually just wanted OP to consider it. I know there cannot be definitive proof.

          • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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            And here come the techbros to dehumanize themselves.

            You and I feel. We don’t just generate outputs from inputs, we experience them. The color red isn’t just a datapoint recorded by photoreceptors, it’s a phenomenal experience that “I”, the self, experience as a being-in-the-world. Further, the color red that I experience is not the same as the color red you experience, even though it’s the same color at the same wavelength. Everything we think and feel relates to everything else, and while I can imagine how you might experience the color red and you can provide me with data points to make it easier for me to imagine it, that imagination will always be tainted by my own subjective experience.

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              To me it looks like you hold a lot of pride in being a human and consider humanity special. Im here to tell you we are no different from amoebas and giraffes. We just specialize in our complex meat computers.

              If you took a psychedelic or a cognitive psychology class you would understand through feel that feel is just the result of you being a meat calculator. Our feelings are the cumulative result of all the inputs and outputs. All at once. Slap some lived experience filters for subjectivity and bam.

              Feel is subjective. Not everyone’s a vicious crypto tech bro. Open your mind its a good time ❤️

              • DigitalPaperTrail@kbin.social
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                to add to this, what we believe we “feel” about something is our association of a thought with the culmination of our previous memories, along with physically biological influences mixed in. The color red being processed by our brain causes excitement, so it’s used in food to increase appetite, in interior decorating to make a scene more romantic and intimate, used in road signs to signify danger; mix the physiological reaction of something with the personal memories associated with it, and you get your personally emotional reaction.

                going further up the comment chain, art doesn’t exist in a bubble, it’s a product of the artist that’s a product of the zeitgeist they existed in. Any piece of art can be picked apart by someone educated enough by the source material and the historical period it was created in; they can dissect the combination of influences that gave birth to the content itself, along with the techniques used. Even if the techniques are “new”, it’s still iterative and a product of other existing methods - either from other artists, or from other fields of expertise.

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                What I’m saying is LLMs do not actually do that. They’re less creative than most animals, even if they’re more technically capable.

                I’m not just a meat calculator, I’m also feedback loop of meat endlessly calculating itself. That’s what subjectivity is. When LLMs do this they hallucinate, and ironically while this is considered undesirable I think that’s actually closer to creativity than the song this AI wrote.

        • Zorque@kbin.social
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          … what do you think imagination is? A gift from God? The probabilities are probably more chaotic, and the data set more biased… but they’re the basic foundation of human imagination.

          Machine based “creativity” is nascent, and far less unique… but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a form of creativity.

          • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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            The human imagination also involves the phenomenal experience. You do not just record the data coming at you and regurgitate it, you experience it and then your experience further changes the data itself. We call this “subjectivity” and it’s where creativity comes from.

            I am not saying that machine creativity is impossible. What I’m saying is these LLMs are not creative because they don’t even know what they’re doing and they don’t even know “they” are doing it. There’s no “there” there. No more creative than rolling dice.

            • PupBiru@kbin.social
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              and experience is ongoing learning, so if an LLM were training on things after the pretraining period then that’d allow it to be creative in your definition?

              but in that case, what’s the difference between doing that all at once, and doing it over a period of time?

              experience is just tweaking your neurons to make new/different connections

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                Experience is ongoing learning through the subjective self. When you experience the color red you do not just record it with your photoreceptors, and your experience of the color red is different from mine because we don’t just record wavelengths of light. We don’t just continue to learn from continual exposure to new data, we also continue to learn from generating our own data. In this way our subjective experience is qualitative, not simply quantitative. I don’t just see the specific light wavelengths, I experience the “redness” of red.

                When LLM is trained on that kind of data it just starts to hallucinate. This is promising! I think the hallucination phenomenon is actually a precursor to creativity and gives us great insights into the nature of subjective experience. In a sense, my phenomenal experience of the color red is actually much like a hallucination where I am also able to experience the color’s “warmth” and “boldness”. Subjectivity.

                • PupBiru@kbin.social
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                  it’s only qualitative because we don’t understand it

                  when an LLM “experiences” new data via training, that’s subjective too: it works its way through the network in a manner that’s different depending on what came before it… if different training data came before it, the network would look differently and the data would change the network as a whole in a different way

            • Zorque@kbin.social
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              The same could be said of a lot of creatives. You speak of greater creativity, that which evokes depth and gravity. There is still more shallow creativity. Learning creativity. That which you do before you learn to do better. Kind of what these are doing.

              I’m not saying it’s good or bad, though the people who hold the reigns definitely don’t have the best intentions for their use, but underestimating it is the first step to allowing them to run rampant.

              “Never attribute to malice that which you can attribute to stupidity” is the slogan of those who do nothing but look down on others… who underestimate the horrible things the “stupid” can do. Don’t assume stupidity just because you don’t like something. It makes it that much easier for it to bite you on the ass in the future.

              • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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                I don’t think I’d actually call that shallow thought “creativity”.

                Think of a word association game. I don’t think the first word that pops up in my head is creative at all, it’s just a thoughtless reaction.

                That’s what LLMs are doing. Without that reflection and depth it’s just a direct input->output

  • anarchy79@lemmy.world
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    How to make line assembled pop music even more sterile and devoid of soul. Now at one thousandth the cost! But wait, how are CEOs going to molest child artists when they aren’t real?!

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    That’s pretty amazing.

    The song sucks, but here was the cutting edge of AI music just seven years ago.

    That it’s gone from some nightmarish fever dream mashup to wannabe pop influencer levels of quality in less than a decade is pretty crazy, and as long as there isn’t a plateau in the next seven years we’ll probably be in a world where AI generated musical artists have a popular enough following that they will have successful holographic concert performances by 2030.

    I over and over see people making the mistake of evaluating the future of AI based on the present state while ignoring the rate of change between the past and present.

    Yeah, most of your experiences of AI in various use cases is mediocre right now. But what we have today in most areas of AI was literally thought to be impossible or very far out just a number of years ago. The fact you have any direct experiences of AI in the early 2020s is fucking insane and beyond anyone’s expectations a decade earlier. And the rate of continued improvement is staggering. Probably the fastest moving field I’ve ever witnessed.

      • kromem@lemmy.world
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        Well, the Beatles and Beach boys are better than emo YouTube influencers as a genre.

        But the quality of the production of the fever dream is dramatically worse.

    • Dizzy Devil Ducky@lemm.ee
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      Technically we already have things like Vocaloid, which aren’t AI yet, but do have their own holographic concerts that are popular in places like Japan and China. So having an AI artist come on stage and sing be too farfetched for me, despite the fact I’d hate it because it’s a soulless entity devised by the corporate fascists. As for the quality of AI generated songs, no clue, but I can totally see them just ripping off up and coming human artists and then sending cease and desist letters to them for “StEaLiNg Ai GeNeRaTeD mUsIc” that was originally stolen or just stealing popular vocaloid songs and piggybacking off of every single person they can for profit.

    • PipedLinkBot@feddit.rocksB
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      Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

      here

      Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

      I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

    • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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      Keep in mind, though, AI progress is often more like punctuated equilibrium.

      Each new approach gets you much further, and polishing each approach gets you slight improvements until the next approach comes along. Improvements to chatgpt might plateau until the next big breakthrough architecture. Or maybe not.

      • kromem@lemmy.world
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        polishing each approach gets you slight improvements

        Without the base model changing at all, research into better use of the models has, depending on the measurement, gone from around 35% success rates to 85% success rates.

        I wouldn’t define that as slight.

  • TheOneWithTheHair@lemmy.world
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    The fact that AI can produce this is impressive as to where we have come with AI. But can this actually threaten human artists?

    In the United States, a federal judge ruled in 2023 that AI artwork cannot meet federal copyright standards because “Copyright law is ‘limited to the original intellectual conceptions of the author’.” With no author, there is no copyright.

    ~~https://www.makeuseof.com/copyright-rules-ai-art/~~ See u/Even_Adder@lemmy.dbzer0.com 's article below.

    “The answer will depend on the circumstances, particularly how the AI tool operates and how it was used to create the final work,” the office said.

    Under current US law, that song is probably now in the public domain. If the law changes, that could mean that in the future, music charts potentially could be filled with AI songs. As it stands, this is most-likely a public domain music machine cranking out music that anyone can use royalty-free. It depends on the interpretation of the courts.

    • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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      The threshold for how much human input counts as “authorship” is extremely low. Photographers get copyright over pictures they take when their sole contribution to the image is aiming the camera and pushing a button. Most AI-generated art involves a lot of human input in the form of prompting, selecting outputs, and then often tweaking or splicing them together in various ways.

      But even if by some weird twist US courts do rule this sort of thing to be public domain, why wouldn’t this “threaten human artists?” Having awesome AI-generated art being public domain seems like the best of both worlds to me - you get awesome art and it’s legally unencumbered. How would a human artist compete with that? Their art would be more expensive and you’d have all kinds of limitations on what you can do with it.

      • TheOneWithTheHair@lemmy.world
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        If the autogenerated art becomes too close to copyrighted art, then you’ll have humans suing AI generators.

        George Harrison’s My Sweet Lord is very similar to He’s So Fine by the Chiffons. And that was an easy case. But some cases in requires deeper analysis, such as Lana Del Ray’s Get Free.

        In January 2018, singer Lana Del Rey claimed that Radiohead were suing her because of alleged similarities between their 1992 debut single Creep, and her song Get Free, from her 2017 album Lust for Life. The band’s publishers Warner/Chappell subsequently denied taking legal action, but did confirm requesting credit for “all writers” of Creep.

        The Guardian spoke to a professional composer to analyse the songs, who noted that the chords used are rare in pop music, and the melodies bear an uncanny resemblance, although in conclusion “imagined the similarities are unintentional”.

        https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20190605-nine-most-notorious-copyright-cases-in-music-history

        If AI is sampling, then how do you defend it being unintentional? While all Radiohead sought was credit on the writing (in this case), would humans (whose livelihood is being threatened) be so generous with an AI composition? And if the music industry is threatened by AI, they will lawyer up.

    • kromem@lemmy.world
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      The mistake you are making is in thinking that the future of media will rely on the same infrastructure as what it’s been historically.

      Media is evolving from being a product, where copyright matters in protecting your product from duplication, to being a service where any individual work is far less valuable because of the degree to which it is serving a niche market.

      Look at how many of the audio money makers on streaming platforms are defined by their genre rather than a specific work. Lofi Girl or ASMR made a ton of money, but there’s not a single specific work that is what made them popular like with a typical recording artist with a hit song.

      The future of something like Spotify will not be a handful of AI artists creating hit singles you and everyone else want to listen to, but AI artists taking the music you uniquely love to listen to and extending it in ways that are optimized around your individual preferences like a personalized composer/performer available 24/7 at low cost.

      In that world, copyright for AI produced works really doesn’t matter for profitability, because AI creation has been completely commoditized.

    • Deceptichum@kbin.social
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      With no author, there is no copyright.

      So old characters such as Mickey Mouse are all fine to use as the authors are dead?

  • PoisonedPrisonPanda@discuss.tchncs.de
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    Looking at the hateful comments gives me shivers when thinking how humans will proceed with machines on an emotional level.

    If we ever reach sentinent AI, it will go towards I-Robot plot. Ill bet.

    Edit typos

    • kromem@lemmy.world
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      I mean, even if this song was coming from a human it’d be derivative, boring, and worthless.

      If anything, the fact something comparable to mediocre human YouTube musical artists is being AI generated is the thing that is wild and impressive. The song itself in isolation is beyond meh.

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        I mean, even if this song was coming from a human it’d be derivative, boring, and worthless.

        Quite a lot of music pumped out by labels is.

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      Seriously, my thought was “I have friends who have Soundclouds that sound worse than this”. But I don’t call my friends’ music “just brutal” or “dreadful in every way”.

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      People can call ai generated movie shit or boring or whatever all they want, but i heard for example Henry styles watermelon sugar high, that song was popular as hell, and it might as well just be ai generated mambo jambo

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    I have a feeling they knew how this would be received considering it seems like they’re rage-baiting and acting pretentious to try and get attention.

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      I accidentally submitted early, but also, I wrote out the lyrics. It’s the most bland version of those breakup-depression kind of songs imaginable. I guess people voted it as “feel-good” out of irony.

      Sitting at my favorite cafe

      Sipping my tea it’s saturday

      Thinking about all he’s done, to everyone

      This town is full of broken dreams

      Shattered hopes, and silent screams

      Somebody please help me

      Betrayed by this town

      Let’s tear it all down

      We’re all just destined to fall

      I’ve lost it all

      Betrayed by this town

      Let’s tear it all down

      We’re all just destined to fall

      We’ve lost it all

      Alone in the streets, alone in my thoughts

      Thinking of all our favorite spots

      I thought someday things might turn around

      But I was lost and never found

      Betrayed by this town

      Let’s tear it all down

      We’re all just destined to fall

      I’ve lost it all

      Betrayed by this town

      Let’s tear it all down

      We’re all just destined to fall

      We’ve lost it all

      Faces painted with smiles

      Lies are told

      A facade of unity

      A vitality sold

      So I sit here in silence

      Just wondering how

      To rewrite the tales

      This town won’t allow

      Betrayed by this town

      Let’s tear it all down

      We’re all just destined to fall

      I’ve lost it all

      Betrayed by this town

      Let’s tear it all down

      We’re all just destined to fall

      We’ve lost it all

      I’ve lost it all

      We’ve lost it all

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        “Betrayed by this town / Let’s burn it all down “ might be the most relevant chorus of today’s music. It’ll be stuck in my head all night and would fit right in at most protests

  • WaxedWookie@lemmy.world
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    It’s not as though the article is any better - bots just wrapping up a comment thread from twitter, cramming it with ads, and presenting it as an article.

    Late stage capitalist media is a dumpster fire.

    • Yeah, my blocked website list is growing everyday with websites that are literally just a 4 paragraph summary of a reddit post. 3 of the paragraphs are usually just "user ‘spezcocksucker’ says this but another person disagrees. Here’s the reddit link and 27 ads.

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    That picture is weird, there’s some AI nonsense going on with the microphone shock mount, and her jaw doesn’t line up with the rest of her face. Plus the usual uncanny valley weirdness of an AI generated image.

    Not even going to bother with the song.

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    This is the worst AI will ever be, again.

    Right now, at the end of 2023, you are seeing barely a year of public interest and widespread development, after maybe a decade of slowly grinding academic experimentation. And already it’s enough to build some Vocaloid knockoff from scratch. You can tell it’s fake, as surely as a seven-fingered hand on some anime girl staring dead into the camera. But if you think all AI drawings still look like that… you should go check.

    This isn’t a threat to artists, though. It’s a threat to the industry. Real human beings who want to make art will have more and better tools than ever before. Audiences that want an endless spigot of AI content… won’t need recording studios. You can already run this stuff on your computer. Some networks are getting better by getting bigger, which demands a really fancy computer. Other networks are getting better by getting smaller. Smaller networks train faster, even if they’re deeper, more abstract, and less predictable. They run faster, too, and on lesser hardware.

    Hold onto your butts, folks. It’s gonna get weird.

    Also, far from the most pressing issue here, but: just say Twitter. You don’t have to respect the stupid rebrand. You know it’s stupid because everyone keeps clarifying what they mean.

    • RickyRigatoni@lemmy.ml
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      Elon has no problem with people deadnaming trans people on his website so why should we avoid deadnaming his website.

      • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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        The actions of bigots are not a good “golden rule” situation. You are called what you want to be called.

        But a business is not a person. Fuck what they want. Businesses are called whatever people recognize.

        Same shit goes for Blackwater and Facebook. Reputation is a necessary part of commerce and politics, and escaping it through shell games is idiotic bullshit we should never respect.

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          This is a good and valid point but in the case of X, the real shit show started after our during the renaming period. Do if you want to point out the idiotic bullshit, I think X is the way to go. Nevertheless, that’s hard to pronounce, like “I re-X-ed your X” sounds like a messed up relationship issue.

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            Twitter was a dumpster fire for a decade before Elmo tricked himself into buying it.

            Every system is perfectly designed to produce its observed outcomes. Twitter was always a harassment engine, by design. If not by intent.

  • Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    Not so much an expert rather than just parroting what I saw, but according to a cursory search, and a Twitter community note I saw from a friend, the voice used by this project is Synthesizer V, which is actually a perfectly legitimate piece of software for using digital voices in music production. If you’ve heard of Vocaloid, or know about Hatsune Miku, SynthV is basically a competitor in that space.

    Going back to the community note, the voice used is actually called Natalie, and apparently the TOS of SynthV does not allow use of its voices using a name that’s different to what was given. So they essentially can’t present the Natalie voice as Anna, which they are.

    EDIT: I want to clarify that these voice synthesisers like SynthV and Vocaloid are usually based on the recording of someone who has consented to the use of their voice in that regard and has been paid for it. It’s not like the current AI voice cloning trend going on.

    Tweet + Community Note

    • xep@kbin.social
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      Thank you, I was wondering about the voice synthesis and if it was part of the AI model they used.

      • Flaky@iusearchlinux.fyi
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        No prob! These digital voices have been around for over a decade now, maybe more. Some of them use “AI” to improve the sound of the voice (i.e. support more languages than actually recorded, make it sound realistic) but not in the way that current AI voice trends are going.

    • 🔍🦘🛎@lemmy.world
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      I’ve used Synthesizer V Studio and the clip in the video definitely showed that’s what they used.

      It looks like they should be disclosing ALL the tools they used to make this. Probably part of the TOS of the other programs too.

  • saigot@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    YouTube link for those that want to see it for themselves. ~~https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=3T175LTQFnw~~ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0l71Hh1gPkE

    To me the biggest problem with it is that it doesn’t understand the relationship between the meanings of the words and the melody of the song. It kinda makes it sound like a bad parody song. I think if you looked at just the lyrics or just the melody they would be quite convincing on their own.

  • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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    1 year ago

    I think in the context of K-Pop it makes total sense, the music and everything around is anyway just done after a formula which has proven to work very well to sell. While right now you need to put children and teenagers through years of rigorous training and expose them to immense stress and pressure so most of them break, with AI you can easily replicate the same formula and refine much quicker without throwing so many young people into the meat grinder of the music industry.

    More money and control for the companies less people killing themselves.

    The ones who really burn for the music will make music despite AI music being available. And they also will find an audience, even though it might be smaller.

    • TheActualDevil@sffa.community
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      1 year ago

      While right now you need to put children and teenagers through years of rigorous training and expose them to immense stress and pressure so most of them break

      Uh… I don’t think that’s a necessary part of the process to making k-pop, or any kind of music. Industry people may think it’s critical to making themselves shit-loads of money, but it’s not important for the creation music or even selling the music.

      • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, that’s what I meant with the rest of my text that people will make music still, and this corporate breaking the children and teenagers can be replaced by AI.

    • reksas@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      What I worry about this is mainstream becoming “accustomed” to assemblyline content by AI. What if eventually people start actually consider the conformity to be good thing and originality deviant? Of course there will always be people who dont care what other think but vast majority of people seems to at least on some level be very conscious about it.

      Imagine being the weird one just because you don’t like ai generated crap

      • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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        1 year ago

        Have you seen the movie WALL-E? The people on the space-ship they’re consuming engaging content all day long, nobody is creating anything anymore, so all this must been created by the AI. I’m just trying to say that it’s not a novel idea. Writers and artists have been imagining this future for ourselves for a long time.

      • The Doctor@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        When you think about it, that’s pretty much the history of boy bands, going all the way back to the Monkees. The faces were carefully chosen for demographic reasons, the songs were written by the labels and targeted for specific demographics, the faces’ histories were largely constructed fictions (and published through “unauthorized” fan magazines and books that were ghostwritten by the labels and laundered through other publishing companies). The only real difference is that now software is being used for it rather than marketing teams.

      • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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        1 year ago

        I’m a programmer, we’ve been advocating and working on replacing ourselves with scripts since the 50ies.