By contrast, an AI translator could be useful, because there really is a shortage of decent translators, and a lot of these tend to be fans.
This is like some EA crap where they try to sell the same game to you over and over and it's somehow progressively getting worse in each iteration. Shifting from "hey, let's build a real game" to "hey, let's build something which can appear in a 30 minute stream".
Imagine if for the 2011 remake of Hunter x Hunter, instead of an updated and retouched show, someone just made a bunch of generic looking characters like that.
It's really just a publisher opening up the "back catalogue" and trying to sell you crap based on a brand.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_×_Hunter
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_×_Hunter_(2011_TV_series)
https://nichegamer.com/manga-publisher-is-remaking-classic-series-eiken-with-ai/ It flattens any unique charm it had and makes it look like generic crap.
A couple of years ago, an influencer made the take that "AI images" would end child abuse and the like. But, I really think they over-estimate the capabilities of this technology. A lot of what it generates is crap. Garbage. It might have a slight novelty to it but otherwise it's just not good.
For just about anything, it would be worse than just getting a human to create the same thing by creating it by hand.
"A number of art communities have even banned AI generated content."
I can't say I'm surprised. It can be very spammy and can crowd out original content. A lot of it is just not really interesting, and how many pieces of it are there which look pretty samey (or generic / tacky)?
It's not a problem unique to diffusion models either. When someone used to feed like a million anime pics into StyleGAN to train a model, there was also an issue where it would be "cool geekery" but would otherwise look boring.
https://reason.com/2024/05/30/the-illusion-of-financial-privacy/
"It's strange how quickly we have accepted the current state of financial surveillance as the norm. Just a few decades ago, withdrawing money didn't involve 20 questions about what we plan to use the money for, what we do for a living, and where we are from. Our daily transactions weren't handed over in bulk to countless third parties."
#FourthAmendment #privacy
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-modern-brain/201909/how-negative-news-distorts-our-thinking Another article about negativity in the media.
https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/archive/2023/03/negativity-bias-online-news-consumption/673499/ One article about the media's tendency towards negativity.
It's one thing when the algorithm has a silly fail but quite a bit of it is like complaining to Ford about how someone uses their cars.
Someone can practically take anything, add the presence of "AI" to it, and pitch it as a unique "shocking story".
There is also a very bad faith suggestion, almost certainly made deliberately as I've covered before, that someone suggested that "#AI" can never be used in a way which could be considered to be "harmful".
That, however, is quite different from pointing out that "AI" sensationalism is grossly exaggerated.
https://reason.com/2024/05/30/these-strange-bedfellows-want-scotus-to-remind-the-5th-circuit-that-journalism-is-not-a-crime/
"Sylvia Gonzalez, a former Castle Hills, #Texas, city council member, plausibly alleges that she was arrested on a trumped-up charge in retaliation for conduct protected by the #FirstAmendment. So does Priscilla Villarreal, an independent journalist in Laredo, Texas."
"It is hard to say how often people engage in the conduct that police cited to justify her arrest, which involved putting a petition in her personal folder during a city council meeting. Villarreal, by contrast, was arrested for asking questions, something that journalists across the country do every day."
"To justify those charges, police cited Section 39.06(c) of the Texas Penal Code, an obscure, rarely invoked law that applies to someone who "solicits or receives from a public servant" information that "has not been made public" with the "intent to obtain a benefit." The claim that Villarreal had violated that law was absurd for several reasons."
"Villarreal, who is represented by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, is asking the Supreme Court to uphold that principle, which her arrest blatantly violated."
#FreeSpeech
https://reason.com/2024/05/29/this-journalist-was-arrested-strip-searched-and-jailed-for-filming-police-will-he-get-justice/
"Prosecutors in #Texas last week dismissed the criminal case against a journalist who, in 2021, was arrested, strip-searched, and jailed for filming police. But his lengthy legal battle is in some sense just beginning and once again demands we probe the idea that real journalists are entitled to a different set of rights than the public."
"Last June, Judge David Hittner of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas allowed Pulliam's federal lawsuit to proceed, declining to award the defendants qualified immunity"
#FirstAmendment #FreeSpeech
https://reason.com/2024/05/30/a-missouri-police-officer-shot-a-blind-and-deaf-dog-now-hes-being-sued/
"In a federal lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of #Missouri, Nicholas Hunter alleges that Officer Myron Woodson and the city of Sturgeon violated his #FourthAmendment rights when Woodson killed Teddy, his 13-pound blind and deaf Shih Tzu, shortly after finding the dog wandering in a neighbor's yard on May 19."
"Sandy Meadows, had been fired from her job at a Baton Rogue grocery store when state inspectors discovered she had been arranging flowers without the proper license. She tragically died, unemployed and in poverty, before the case could be heard."
Wait, what.
Well, this sounds like an issue for #HumanRights.
https://reason.com/2024/05/30/louisiana-finally-fixes-americas-dumbest-licensing-requirement/
"Louisiana is the only state in the country that requires florists to be licensed by the government. A bill that is now on the way to Gov. Jeff Landry's desk sadly won't change that fact, but it will eliminate the mandatory test that prospective florists in Louisiana must pass before being allowed to earn a living by placing different types of flowers together in an arrangement. Going forward, obtaining a florist license will require only the payment of a fee to the state."
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.