AI art does "something" to my perception, I tend to strongly dislike it from the first glance, but I am unable to see why or whether it was generated.
In general, it makes me want to consume less and less of "this". Which, in a sense, coincides with the drop of media consumption in general.
What we see now is subtle poisoning of content: video games, news, social media, books, music.
At some point in the future, it is going to pass the threshold of not being worthy of attention for almost anyone, so the whole industries will collapse.
And we will have to start again, from one soul to the others, with permaban on anything computer generated.
In general, it is possible, to subtle integrate computer generation in creative workflows enabling artists to create something great with less effort, but I am not sure that LLM is the way to go with this.
Same. It's almost like an allergic reaction. As soon as I perceive a hint of "AI" origin I feel a strong aversion. Probably some uncanny valley dynamic, plus the sense of over saturation with "content" in general, where AI in particular contributes nothing of value.
In general, it makes me want to consume less and less of "this". Which, in a sense, coincides with the drop of media consumption in general.
What we see now is subtle poisoning of content: video games, news, social media, books, music.
At some point in the future, it is going to pass the threshold of not being worthy of attention for almost anyone, so the whole industries will collapse.
And we will have to start again, from one soul to the others, with permaban on anything computer generated.
In general, it is possible, to subtle integrate computer generation in creative workflows enabling artists to create something great with less effort, but I am not sure that LLM is the way to go with this.