[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This might be a two-in-one kinda thing but...

Im not a fan of Steel Path. Like, it's fine, I guess, but "make enemies tankier" just isn't a lot of fun IMO.

That said, here's my "hot take", Steel Path Circuit is a blast.

I've only got a few hours to play each week so I've pretty much stopped doing Archon hunts, Khal's thing, Nightwave, etc.

I play with rando's and, while sometimes frustrating, once things click it's just fun. Hell, even when RNG curses me, I can still run support (picking up fragments standing folks back up, grabbing energy cells, etc.)

Its nice to go in and know, no matter the reward I might get, the game mode itself is fun to play.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 9 points 1 year ago

Because this thread was about the companies taking art feeding it into their machine a D claiming not to have stolen it.

Then you compared that to clicking a link.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 5 points 1 year ago

The machine didn't take the blacksmiths work product and flood the market with copies.

The machine wasn't fed 10,000 blacksmith made hammers then told to, sorta, copy those.

Justify this all you want, throw all the bad analogies at it you want, it's still bad.

Again, if this wasn't bad, the companies would have asked for permission. They didn't.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 6 points 1 year ago

Just because you've redefined theft in a way that makes you feel okay about it doesn't change what they did.

They took someone else's work product, fed it into their machine then used that to make money.

They stole someone's labor.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 6 points 1 year ago

You keep comparing what one person, given MONTHS or YEARS of their life could do with one artists work to a machine doing NOT THE SAME THING can do with thousands of artists work.

The machine is not learning their style, it's taking pieces of the work and dropping it in with other people's work then trying to blend it into a cohesive whole.

The analogy fails all over the place.

And I don't care about copyright, I'm not an artist or an IP lawyer, or whatever. I can just look at a company stealing the labor of an entire industry and see it as bad.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 16 points 1 year ago

"other people were bad so I should be bad to."

Cool.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 10 points 1 year ago

Yes, because "imitate" and "copy" are different things when stealing from someone.

I do understand how it works, the "overfitting" was just laying clear what it does. It copies but tries to sample things in a way that won't look like clear copies. It had no creativity, it is trying to find new ways of making copies.

If any of this was ethical, the companies doing it would have just asked for permission. That they didn't says a everything you need to know.

I don't usually have these kinds discussions anymore, I got tired of conversations like this back in 2016, when it became clear that people will go to the ends of the earth to justify unethical behavior as long as the people being hurt by it are people they don't care about.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 11 points 1 year ago

By that logic I can sell anything I download from the web while also claiming credit for it, right?

Downloading to view != downloading to fuel my business.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 27 points 1 year ago

Yes copies were made. The files were downloaded, one way or another (even as a hash, or whatever digital asset they claim to translate them into) then fed to their machines.

If I go into a Ford plant, take pictures of their equipment, then use those to make my own machines, it's still IP theft, even if I didn't walk out with the machine.

Make all the excuses you want, you're supporting the theft of other people's life's work then trying to claim it's ethical.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 17 points 1 year ago

The fact that folks can identify the source of various parts of the output, and that intact watermarks have shown up, shows that it doesn't work like you think it does.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 14 points 1 year ago

No, you used it to inform your style.

You didn't drop his art on to a screenprinter, smash someone else's art on top, then try to sell t-shirts.

Trying to compare any of this to how one, individual, human learns is such a wildly inaccurate way to justify stealing a someone's else's work product.

[-] Pulse@dormi.zone 33 points 1 year ago

Yes, it was.

One human artist can, over a life time, learn from a few artists to inform their style.

These AI setups are telling ALL the art from ALL the artists and using them as part of a for profit business.

There is no ethical stance for letting billion dollar tech firms hoover up all the art ever created to the try and remix it for profit.

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Pulse

joined 1 year ago