The thing, though, as we have repeated to you so many times, is that generative AIs simply can't replicate the abilities of human artists and writers. Consider the term "AI slop" ─ that is the crap that generative AI's churn out, and it is clear that it is obvious to the public that it simply does not match the output of human creators (or otherwise the term would not have been coined and would not have gained currency in the first place). People simply don't want what generative AI's produce, and while generative AI's may seem attractive to short-sighted executives who dream of replacing human workers, it is clear that generative AI's have a reverse Midas touch, and said executives will soon learn that when the content they sell suffers with the public.malloc wrote: ↑Sat Jan 31, 2026 12:00 pmIt's not merely an interesting philosophical question but a serious challenge to humanity and its place in the world. Realistically what happens to human artists and writers when machines can replicate their abilities at a fraction of the cost? The vast majority of them lose their jobs and humanity finds itself forced out of art and literature. Meanwhile there are no better jobs waiting for all those displaced artists because automation has already eliminated work in so many other fields.Ares Land wrote: ↑Sat Jan 31, 2026 9:07 amIt's an interesting philosophical question. You'd have to think at how humans create? I think you need an ability to feel emotion and enough insight into it to evoke it in others, a will of your own, a consciousness, and not to get all Freudian on you, but most certainly a subconscious.
Edit: If you are wondering, YouTube right now is pulling generative AI-created content, probably because advertisers threatened to pull out rather than pay money to advertise on channels that people don't actually want to watch.