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IceMetalPunk | 3 years ago
And this is the crux of my biggest issue with people who are against AI art. The question "if artists can't make money on it, why would they make or share art in the first place?" is so incredibly depressing, dystopian, and frustrating to me. I understand we live in a largely capitalistic world, for better or for worse (mostly worse), but making a cash profit should not be the primary motivation to create and share art. The joy of creation and aesthetic appreciation should be. Art is only a human endeavor if it's done for intrinsic value or to share an idea or an emotion. Once the main -- or indeed only -- reason for creating something becomes "how many dollar bills will people put in my bank account if I let them see this?", it ceases to be art, in my opinion, and becomes conditioned capitalistic greed.
Don't get me wrong, if you make art that people want to pay you for, that's great! But if you remove the paycheck and suddenly can't think of any good reasons to continue creating, then it is my humble opinion that you were never making art in the first place. You were simply chasing currency, the nature of which you almost certainly don't understand anyway.
d1sxeyes|3 years ago
Overall though, perhaps I've oversimplified. The question I should have asked should have been 'if artists can't make money on it, then how can they afford to dedicate time to developing their craft and producing their art?'
Personally, my suggestion would be something like Universal Basic Income, but there are a lot of people who would be against that.
helloworld11|3 years ago
Truly, go live in the real world of being an artist who's struggling to get by at even a basic level and doesn't have all the soft cushions in life that provoke absurdly rigid and privileged sentiments like the ones you wrote here.
Creativity and the desire to express it don't put a person outside the essential pressures of economic need and its emotional roller coasters. On the other hand, when those needs aren't really satisfied, it can quickly become damn hard to be creative even if you're sincerely emotionally passionate about your creative expression. It's nice to spout crap about how people shouldn't create art just for "capitalistic greed", but for someone straining just to pay monthly rent and basic expenses, there's nothing greedy about having their creative motivation lubricated along with some decent sales or financial sponsorship. What nonsense to assume otherwise.
techdragon|3 years ago
Some have been able to make a living as a niche podcast host for years now but now it’s not enough… and they aren’t even in a field where they are competing against the AI art… yet (I struggle to imagine how pointless and devoid of meaning an AI generated podcasts would sound)
I dunno how long the house of cards can keep stacking up, but eventually it will collapse and we’re going to have to change how we do capitalism… or it will need replacement. If a 25k up front domestic robot with 1k per year maintenance costs, plus electricity costs (solar & wind just gets cheaper with amortisation) can do basic factory work, how many people from the bottom tier of society can have no job prospects before it collapses? The average IQ is not 100, it’s lower, 100 is the ideal, there’s a lot of people who aren’t going to get robot programmer jobs who would have been drivers or low skill tradesmen/general contractors…
I’m genuinely not sure what will happen but it just seems inevitable without the same sort of changes that will help Artists have a living while producing art.