a book. I often compare myself to many great writers; Ray Bradbury, Neil Gaiman, Tolkien, just to name a few. People that make me doubt I even belong at the writer's table although I have put in the work throughout my adult life and some of my teens to be there.
6/8
You raise some very important points. I often wonder how true artists/writers feel about AI.
I am wholly underwhelmed by the “art” I see generated.
@LnzyHou same! Very underwhelmed
In addition to the ethical issues surrounding how the AI is trained on the work of human artists and the lack of transparency about what inputs it's relying on to create texts or images... there's the problem that people are far more willing to ascribe competence, creativity, and thought to something that's basically a calculator.
They're relying on it to do things like write contracts or answer factual questions--and it can't do that. Not really. It can only appear to do that.
Just want my position clear. AI is not an art. Period.
It's a tool. A good tool; language-based, which is friendly to how we work as humans. I have tried it in order to put maths or complicated subjects into an easy-to-digest form. In that way, it's like a Wiki that you can 7/8