• captainastronaut@seattlelunarsociety.org
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    9 months ago

    It’s pretty terrifying when you think about the possibilities of deception. And also how throwaway content is going to become. We are going to generate content at a volume orders of magnitude larger than our already current excessive volume, and finding the stuff that has real meaning and a real message is going to be even harder.

    Also, artists whose work and styles fed this will be put out of business without ever being paid for their work that was used to train these models. 🫤

      • Emerald@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        corn pop he can’t stop

        time and time again

        corn pop we won’t stop

        we’ll never give up my friend

        corn pop find the sweet spot

        time and time again

      • Cornpop@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        That sounds like hell, making money is a blast. If everything was truly equal we would all be living in extreme poverty. Global average income is $9,733 USD per year. I make that in a week, hard pass on that commie bullshit.

        • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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          9 months ago

          Going to work so I can eat and pay rent fucking sucks, what are you talking about? The fact that you even conceptualize economic output as being all about money means you’re missing the point of an economy. Money is a representation of wealth, not wealth itself. You can’t eat money, shelter yourself from the elements with money, cure diseases with money, etc. Having access to goods and services is a blast, but money is nothing more than a mechanism to facilitate trade and the distribution of wealth.

          The “commie bullshit” is entirely your contribution. I said nothing at all about making everyone’s income equal. Not within a country and certainly not between regions with wildly different costs of living. I’m talking about actual wealth, actual labor, and the way a society decides who deserves to have access to material wealth.

          Let me spell it out for you: when a new technology makes a category of work obsolete, it sounds be a good thing because less work needs to be done to produce the same wealth. It’s like how having a washing machine is great because it saves you from doing many hours of tedious labor with essentially no downside. The reason that doesn’t work at a societal level is because our economic system is designed to funnel 100% of the benefits of labor-saving technology to a parasitic ownership class, leaving the average person poorer as a result. Our economic system is based entirely around scarcity, and introducing just a little bit of abundance breaks it and fucks over people whose labor is no longer needed by denying them access to wealth.

          Do you really think it’s reasonable that having less work needing to be done to produce the same wealth should ever make the average person less well off?

          • Cornpop@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Some kinda UBI is good, but people still need a purpose. We should still strive to build something and better ourselves.

            • frezik@midwest.social
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              9 months ago

              You don’t need work for that. You need work to do necessary things for society, which would be far less than the amount of work being done right now.

        • frezik@midwest.social
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          9 months ago

          Global average income is $9,733 USD per year.

          Why would you cite this fact in defense of the current system?

        • illi@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          The idea behind universal basic income is that hpu get enough money to cover your basic needs - then you can do a job you like to earn more so that you have more than basic needs fulfilled. So you could still earn money if that’s what you so enjoy.

          • Cornpop@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Yea I’m with that idea. But no one working and just getting paid to exist is a strange concept for me.

            • illi@lemm.ee
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              9 months ago

              Obviously people will need to be working still, a time when all work is done for us is long way off. Besides, there were studies made on this and most people would still work in some capacity (not all, obviously) - but with you getting money to cover your needs you could quit thenjob you just have for the money and do something you enjoy. Or keep the job you do just for money if lots of money is important to you - but you would be free to take sabatical if you’d start burning out without fear - because you would still have the UBI even if you spent all your money and didn’t save any.

              Especially now with raise of AI this is something that will be needed sooner rather than later - question is when, not if. And another question is how will humanity fuck it up - because that’s what wedo best and the theory behind it sounds too good to be true.

        • Apollo@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          You’re an inspiration to all out there who think intelligence is a barrier to making 9k a week.

          • Cornpop@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            No AI is ever going to replace what I do. I salvage aircraft and motorcycles. Zero worry there.

            • Link@rentadrunk.org
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              9 months ago

              The AI can be added to a robot that can salvage aircraft and motorcycles. It would be far cheaper to employ than a human as well.

              • Cornpop@lemmy.world
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                9 months ago

                lol no. Far far off before a robot could do what we do. The dexterity required to remove a bolt from inside a wing, or even a rusty bolt on a motorcycle, or disassemble an engine is far outside anything a robot can even come close to achieve. And everything is unique. Just not feasible in any way what so ever. Assembly is another story and yes a lot of automation can be achieved there, but that’s because it’s doing the same action over and over and very precise. Disassembly is way different, unique in every case. Extreme dexterity required. Often the stuff is crashed and bent up and requires very advanced knowledge of the exact unit being taken apart. Bolts strip out and break over time, things rust. A universal robot that do what’s needed would be insanely expensive. Not feasible at all.

                • shneancy@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  AI is not just a “universal robot”, it’s something that can have the entire database of every existing vehicle and aircraft uploaded into it to learn from, then given a robotic body (robotics are still advancing may I remind you, not as loudly as AI but certainly forward every day), it could do your job faster, better, more reliably, and cheaper in the long run, maybe you’ll even get the honour of fixing the mistakes it makes the first few weeks at your job to make it better, then you’ll become obsolete.

                  Don’t laugh at folks who are having their jobs usurped by soulless code right now, sooner or later - it’ll happen to you.

        • SuckMyWang@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Do you really cornpop? And what do that consistently makes you over half a million dollars a year in income?

          • Cornpop@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            I run a fairly large salvage company. I dismantle aircraft and Powersport vehicles (motorcycles, atvs, sxs, anything with a motor really) I do 500-700k a year in revenue.

    • wrekone@lemmyf.uk
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      9 months ago

      When I was a kid, I had seen, or at least heard of, nearly every TV show from my parent’s generation. Going back probably 40 years. Like, I’ve probably seen every Looney Tunes, every episode of M.A.S.H., and most episodes of The Munsters, because some days there wasn’t anything else to watch. My kids look at me crazy if I haven’t heard of the latest flash-in-the-pan influencer, but if I bring up a 10-year old movie or TV show, they have no idea what I’m talking about.

      • evranch@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        I miss the shared culture that broadcast TV and radio gave us. Is the selection today better, with more, higher quality content? Definitely.

        But all of us Millenials can quote Simpsons at each other all day even if we’ve never met. South park, Futurama, King of the Hill, James Bond and other corny action movies. We all saw them so many times, because that’s what was on.

        That shared culture is worth more than the content actually being good, IMO. Half the time now someone will ask if you’ve seen a show and you haven’t ever heard of it.

    • Aniki 🌱🌿@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      you raise a crazy good point - the amount of data youtube generates is staggering and that includes a high barrier to entry. if sora allows anyone to just cut shit and upload it, we’re going to outpace the rate at which data-free hardware is manufactured.

    • devfuuu@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      And we will be stuck in a loop of type of art and culture that is a ouruborus feeding itself without new styles or genuine new art being fed after artists not being recognized and payed and not wanting to give more content to the machine. That dark ages are upon us and we are all singing it’s praise.

    • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      We are going to generate content at a volume orders of magnitude larger than our already current excessive volume, and finding the stuff that has real meaning and a real message is going to be even harder.

      It could go both ways: similar software could “compress” video (especially AI-generated video) into text prompts that could then re-create it without needing to store it. (Currently, of course, the processing cost would be higher than the storage cost for the raw video—but the scenario in which we’re cranking out excessive amounts of AI-generated content implies that the high processing costs have been eliminated.) That would also have the side effect of making it easier to find and organize videos based on their “meaning”.

      • SentaMiz@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        I think the idea of using natural language to generate video is flawed for the vast majority of applications we want. Imagine you could give a script to one of these models and have it output a TV show episode. While we can make these models deterministic it seems like the vast majority of generative content with some amount of quality requires the addition of random noise through the process. Should we want TV episodes whose visual quality and little details shift from model to model? Why not store a plain text description infered by some model and store the video component in a medium less prone to misinterpretation? We may use deep learning compression for videos and audio in the future if there are significant advancements but I doubt the compression will be to English.

    • Emerald@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      If you are concerned about AI making “content” more throwaway, then you are already viewing creative works as something throwaway. Artists make works with meaning, AI doesn’t have a brain, it can’t make things with a meaning. That’s the job of the artist.

      • planish@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        But now, or soon, you can have one person with half an idea, like “what if The Rock had to save Shanghai from mole zombies”, and they can grab a text generator to fill in most of the screenplay, and then dial in the number of synonyms for “exciting” used to describe the explosions, and come out with Day of the Living Moles, a 95 minute feature film, in a weekend. Without actually having to have had any traditional cinematography skills or breaking an artistic sweat.

        There are categories of creative work that are throw-away; little sketches on napkins, improvised songs, quick sketches that an artist might think of are of no account to anyone. And the scope of what can be dashed off like that, with minimal time and effort, is growing because of more powerful tools.

        Why should I watch Universal’s superhero blockbuster when I can watch my buddy Jimothy’s? What happens when the number of plausible films dramatically exceeds the time that movie critics have to watch them to sort out which are any good?

        • Emerald@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Why should I watch Universal’s superhero blockbuster when I can watch my buddy Jimothy’s?

          That’s up for you to decide.

          What happens when the number of plausible films dramatically exceeds the time that movie critics have to watch them to sort out which are any good?

          Movie critics don’t have to watch every movie in the world. Also why trust some critics anyways? Just watch something and see for yourself

      • smeenz@lemmy.nz
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        9 months ago

        So you’re saying the people who write and tweak the prompts to create the output they envisaged don’t deserve to be called artists?

        In my mind, AI just lowers the barrier required for people to be able to express what’s in their mind

        • shneancy@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          if you actually were to try and engage in artistic expression you’d find out the whole process from conception to finishing your creation is something worth the time, and mistakes/accidents that often happen during it can bring new ideas to the surface. In that process you have the ultimate control over how good it turns out. Be it comically bad or a masterpiece there’s a charm in how you have expressed your idea.

          AI flattens all that to a button click and regurgitates what’s already been made by somebody else, oftentimes creating something you’ve most likely already seen, somewhere, and won’t remember for long.

          • Traister101
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            9 months ago

            It’s called “prompting” and anybody doing it deserves mockery

        • butterflyattack@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          AI just lowers the barrier required for people to be able to express what’s in their mind

          Yeah, there’s nothing wrong with people being about to express themselves, but that’s not necessarily art. With art the barriers are things like talent, creativity, and hard work. Lowering those barriers mostly creates rubbish. Typing ‘Make a pic of an x fighting a y and make it look cool!’ doesn’t make anyone an artist.

    • TimeSquirrel@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      We spent decades depicting science fiction AIs as the key to giving humanity true freedom from mandatory labor, and now we’re scared because it can do creative work too? We’ll adapt. We’ll be just fine. A new generation will crop up that will have no issues with AI-generated content. We’re too old to see it like they will. Just like a lot of our parents and grandparents didn’t understand email until they were forced to, while us kids were doing all kinds of things online.

      I mean shoot, my parents still argue with me over whether electronic music is even music or not. It’s just gonna be another tool in an artist’s arsenal.

      • demonsword@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        We spent decades depicting science fiction AIs as the key to giving humanity true freedom from mandatory labor

        Very few people benefit from automation and AI. Most of us will eventually be replaced by an IA and our only freedom will be to starve (or to rebel, who knows)

        • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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          9 months ago

          People can and have made the same argument about new technology since the dawn of the industrial revolution, but it hasn’t worked out that way. Industrialized countries are synonymous with rich countries. The problem with new technology, both now and then, it’s that the ownership of the means of production always becomes concentrated in the hands of a small class of people who have no interest in sharing their wealth. This far the benefits of technology have trickled down to the masses, but never without hurting a bunch of people in the process precisely because a few people have been allowed to hoard most of the benefits for themselves.

          • demonsword@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            The problem with new technology, both now and then, it’s that the ownership of the means of production always becomes concentrated in the hands of a small class of people who have no interest in sharing their wealth.

            Yes, I’m aware. And that’s precisely capitalism’s heart, which means that to change that we’d need to topple capitalism itself.

      • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        We spent decades depicting science fiction AIs as the key to giving humanity true freedom from mandatory labor

        Maybe those stories never make it to the cinema but any time I see AI in a movie the humans do not come out on top.

        • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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          9 months ago

          Utopian science fiction is less popular, but look at Star Trek for example. Commander Data in The Next Generation and the EMH in Voyager provide invaluable help to the crews they work with. Or look at the robot in Interstellar for another example for a possibly portrayal of AI in a mostly dystopian setting. Even the droids in Star Wars would be impossible without very advanced AI (even if that fact isn’t discussed in universe), and a great many droids are shown as being critical to the success of ventures they take part in.

          • BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            I’ll give you Star Trek but that’s also a stretch because Earth essentially becomes a communist society, or at least a society that’s no longer driven by wealth. Right now that seems more far-fetched than a self-aware digital lifeform.

    • Not_mikey@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Why would real meaning and messages be harder to find, does AI generated art inherently have less meaning?

      Let’s say I wanted to convey the message that oil companies are destroying the environment so , throwing subtlety out the window, come up with an idea of “a vampiric oil baron draining mother nature of oil”, does the picture that is generated from me putting that prompt into an AI generator have any less meaning then if I actually drew it myself?

      For all the advances in AI it still lacks intentionality, and always will under these current models, that has to be supplied by the person in the form of a prompt. I’d say that intention is the source of messages and meaning in art. AI just allows people without technical abilities in art to express those intentions, feelings and messages.

      • BurningnnTree@lemmy.one
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        9 months ago

        I can’t speak for everyone, but for me personally, yes I feel like art is less interesting now. Over the past couple years or so I’ve found that I’m less impressed by art that I see online.

        I’m not an artist, and I’m not someone who seeks out art to appreciate it. I’m just talking about art that I scroll past on the internet. I find it less interesting now. I assume that it’s all AI generated, and if it’s not, I figure it might as well be. It’s just not interesting to me anymore. The image generated by a prompt is no more interesting or thought provoking than the prompt itself.

        • Cornpop@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Digital art maybe, but real art you can touch, hold and feel? No AI will ever replace that.

      • Kage520@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Now imagine that 100 oil employees make good looking ai art to show mother nature either sharing the oil with someone to help them in some way, or even make it look like oil is helping remove a cancer or something from herself. 100 different variations of this. How impactful is your message compared to theirs? Will people even see yours?

        • Not_mikey@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          If anything this was worse under the old system. Making art previously costed a lot of money, you had to pay the artists for their time and money, and better artists cost more. So in the past that oil company could commission 100 top quality artists to make corporate propaganda while a person who cares for the environment but has no money could only make a drawing limited by their own personal technical artistic ability, which could be just stick figures.

          This is why “high quality” consumerist and capitalist “art” and branding in the form of advertising is so abundant meanwhile anti-consumerist, anti-capitalist art is rarer, no one’s paying to get it made.

          Now any cause, regardless of money, can create at least mid art to get there message across. Those causes can also have way more people behind them then an oil company can reasonably hire

          It’s sort of like how the gun changed how power worked. Previously a king could use there resources to pay for a smaller army of well equipped highly trained knights to subjugate a group of people. Then when the gun came training and equipment didn’t matter nearly as much and it became more of a numbers game, and to get those numbers rulers needed to give more power to the masses in order to be able to marshall them for their cause. Those rulers who didn’t got overthrown in revolutions.

      • grabyourmotherskeys@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        You are correct and it drives people crazy. Just consider, though, that people were saying that the web allowing anyone to publish their views as fact would undermine the averages person’s ability to know what is true. It kind of did.

        I don’t have a hot take. I agree with you. But I also think this will change things in ways we don’t fully understand yet.

  • danielfgom@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Instead of using robots to replace menial jobs and help humans who have physical labour jobs, they’ve invented a tool that will get rid of all white collar jobs, forcing us all into manual, low paid labour jobs.

    Taxes will fall off a cliff and life will get really bad because the state won’t have money to maintain the country. Companies making Ai content won’t be able to sell it because no one can has money to buy it. In general all product sales will fall off a cliff, except for food, and many companies will close, resulting in mass unemployment and eventually collapse of society …

    Great job morons!

    • realharo@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      If AI gets really good, manual labor automation won’t be far behind, as the AI itself will be applied to robotics and AI research.

      The only thing of value left will be natural resources.

      • danielfgom@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Sounds like good motivation for the machines to kill us off and keep the resources for themselves

        • TwilightVulpine@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          More like, a motivation for the wealthy who control the machines to kill us off.

          AI sentience is still science fiction but AI-powered corporate exploitation is very real, right now.

        • realharo@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          That’s assuming they have that goal. The goal of survival and reproduction exists because of natural selection (those that don’t have that goal simply don’t make it into the next generation, when competing against those that do).

          But that doesn’t necessarily apply to AI systems. At least while humans have a say in which systems survive and get developed further, and which ones get scrapped. When humans control the resources, the best way to get a sizable allocation of them is by being useful to humans (or at least making them believe that).

      • butterflyattack@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Happily my job is so shit and poorly paid that I don’t anticipate it ever being worth automating. Sometimes humans are just cheaper.

    • gapbetweenus@feddit.de
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      9 months ago

      forcing us all into manual, low paid labour jobs.

      Maybe we should have shown some solidarity with people in those jobs and fought for them to get paid better?

    • willington@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 months ago

      There’s always money/wealth in the economy. If the workers don’t have it, someone else does. Find where the money is, and tax it. Then redistribute.

      It’s not a hard concept. It’s a question of the political will. We know what to do, but will we do it?

      • captainastronaut@seattlelunarsociety.org
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        9 months ago

        We already do know where the wealth is and we aren’t taxing it. I think we know the answer to that question. Systems are only still functioning because there’s a dribble of tax revenue that still comes in. But we are already seeing schools lose funding and roads crumble as tax revenue hasn’t grown as fast as costs or populations. I don’t think it’s going to get better, because you have to be rich or have rich allies to get elected, so I don’t know how we could create different tax laws.

    • abhibeckert@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      TLDR: a year ago AI video was garbage. Today it’s almost as good as one that would cost a few hundred thousand dollars to pay a human production team to make (according to someone who’s professional work is creating those videos).

      It’s not quite there - hands glitch out occasionally. Sometimes animation doesn’t quite line up right (e.g. walking might skip a step) but it’s 99% there and and the improvements over the last 12 months are astounding. That last 1% surely won’t take long to close.

      There was a landscape drone video from a helicopter that looked absolutely real.

      Note this is not publicly available yet - OpenAI said they are still working on safety features to reduce the risk of it being used to create content that they want no part in.

    • squirrel@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      9 months ago

      I’ve asked Gemini for a summary and it’s pretty spot on:

      This video is about AI generated videos and how they have become very realistic.

      The speaker, Marques Brownlee, discusses a new AI model called Sora that can generate videos from text input. He shows examples of videos generated by Sora, including one of a woman walking down a Tokyo street, a car driving up a mountain road, and a litter of puppies playing in the snow. He points out that these videos are still not perfect, but they are much better than what was possible just a year ago.

      He discusses the implications of this technology, both good and bad. On the one hand, it could be used to create fake videos that could be used to deceive people. On the other hand, it could be used to create stock footage that is more affordable and accessible than ever before. Brownlee concludes by saying that this technology is still in its early stages, but it has the potential to change the world in many ways.

      • demonsword@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        I’ve asked Gemini for a summary

        man you’ve post the video and couldn’t even summarize it yourself? talk about laziness huh

        • CaffeinatedMoth@lemm.ee
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          9 months ago

          Let’s see. Spend several minutes composing a few paragraphs, followed by revising because of errors in composition, spelling,or grammar…or simply spend a few seconds with AI. Work smarter not harder.

        • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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          9 months ago

          Let’s see your summary of the article, then. I can’t help but notice you haven’t included one in your comment.

          (Apologies if you were being tongue in cheek.)

  • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Now I can be in the Simpsons! Everyone in my front yard security camera can be in the Simpsons 😀!

    • KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 months ago

      “Sir, I understand you’re trying to be helpful, but I assure you the background characters from the symptoms did not rob you.

      • PlexSheep@feddit.de
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        9 months ago

        That’s inaccurate. Red Team is the guys that test your security from an attacker view point. Red Teams are often contractors hired by companies. The companies are the ones paying to be “hacked”, so they can fix whatever gaping security holes the red Team finds.

        At least, that’s usually the definition. If just talking about AI stuff, I’d call those people testers.

        • Lightdm@feddit.de
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          9 months ago

          I always thought that people hired to pen test are white hat hackers? What is the difference to red team?

          • PlexSheep@feddit.de
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            9 months ago

            People in red Teams are white hats. The terms describe different things. The “color wheel” is operational and thinks in the context of an organization. Red Team tries to attack our stuff, blue team tries to defend our stuff, yellow team builds our stuff etc.

            White hat is just a term for ethical hackers, black hat is a term for criminals. Grey hat means someone in-between (think political hacker defacing website of organization they don’t like), there is also some more but the shades of grey are most important.

          • theherk@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            While white hats are sometimes paid, it is generally in bounties. It just means being adversarial without trying to be unethical. So, find the hole but tell the person that made it rather than the crooks that will exploit it.

            A red team on the other hand is a known value. They are the bad guys in a simulation. The military exercises similarly or any organization that wants to test defenses. Red team == the make believe bad guys.

  • UraniumBlazer@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    I’m really excited for this. This way, converting my favourite webtoons to full blown animations won’t be that difficult (in the sense that it won’t cost millions of dollars). Really exciting times!

    • coolmojo@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Have a look at Blender it is free and open source software which enables you to create 3d animations. You can find tutorials on the Internet.

      • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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        9 months ago

        That requires vastly more work to produce any results at all, to the point that most animation people might want to produce never gets made because the process is far too expensive. Mediocre animation that gets made using AI tools is better then high-quality animation that never gets made at all.

        Blender and AI tools both have their place but they’re not interchangeable. And just wait until Blender starts incorporating AI, which it will, because the purpose of something like Blender is to use computers to automate most of the work that would need to be done with previous generations of tools, and AI is just an extension of that. Animation will exist on a continuum from fully handmade artwork to fully machine generated artwork. Unless you think everything should be drawn by hand one frame at a time, you should be happy about everyone being able to produce animation in a way that suits their skill level and the amount of time they have available.

    • Emerald@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Consistency is still an issue. It’s hard to generate multiple images or videos and have a consistent visual style with ai

      • UraniumBlazer@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        Not necessarily. Fine-tuning models can solve this issue to a great degree. The model’s behavior is largely dependent on its training data. If it has generic training data, it’s going to produce generic images.

        See Corridor crew’s anime experiment. They managed to solve this issue to a great degree in their second version. It’s quite cool!