I heard a bunch of explanations but most of them seem emotional and aggressive, and while I respect that this is an emotional subject, I can’t really understand opinions that boil down to “theft” and are aggressive about it.

while there are plenty of models that were trained on copyrighted material without consent (which is piracy, not theft but close enough when talking about small businesses or individuals) is there an argument against models that were legally trained? And if so, is it something past the saying that AI art is lifeless?

  • @[email protected]
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    11 day ago

    If that’s the case, it’s a language barrier thing. The equivalent to “plastic art” in my native language excludes paintings.

    • @Valmond
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      1 day ago

      Fair enough!

      English and french seems to include it.

      What’s the language? Maybe it’s more literal and fr/en has some historical etymology…

      • @[email protected]
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        124 hours ago

        In German, it’s “plastische Kunst”. The adjective “plastisch” basically means “three dimensional”, as in “not flat”.

        Plastische Chirurgie is plastic surgery - it’s not primarily putting “plastic” into bodies ;) but sculpting a three dimensional form.

        • @Valmond
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          110 hours ago

          Interesting, in french, latin, greek before that, it seems it’s about plasticity, the possibility to modulate materials.

          Stumbled onto wilipedia and Kant coining the modern expression, with, if I understood it correctly, painting in the definition. Guess it didn’t stick in his homeland :-)