- cross-posted to:
- tech@kbin.social
- cross-posted to:
- tech@kbin.social
Visual artists fight back against AI companies for repurposing their work::Three visual artists are suing artificial intelligence image-generators to protect their copyrights and careers.
Cool. But this is still stuff that has a “right” answer. Math. Math in the form of game rules, but still math.
I have seen no evidence that MLs can comprehend the abstract. To know, or more accurately, model, the human experience. It’s not even clear, that given a conscious entity, it is possible to communicate about being human to something non-human.
I am amazed, but not surprised, that you can explain a “system” to an LLM. However, doing the same for a concept, or human emotion, is not something I think is possible.
What are you talking about? You wanted evidence that NNs can understand stuff, I showed you evidence.
Yes, and math can represent whatever you want. It can represent language, it can represent physics, it can even represent a human brain. Don’t assume we are more than incredibly complicated machines. If you want to argue “it’s just math”, then show me that anything isn’t just math.
See? And that’s the handwaving. You’re talking about “the human experience” as if that’s a thing with an actual definition. Why is “the human experience” relevant to whether NNs can understand things?
And the next handwave - what is a concept? How is “the board in Othello” not a concept?
Modern MLs are nowhere near complex enough to model reality to the extent required for genuine artistic expression.
That you need me to say this using an essay instead of a sentence, is your problem, not mine.
You’d have to bring up actual evidence for this. Easiest would be to start by defining “genuine artistic expression”. But I have a feeling you’ll just resort to the next handwave…
Thank you for confirming that your position doesn’t make any sense.
Rude. Thanks for confirming my choice on minimizing the effort I spend on you, I guess.