0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Many talk about selling AI images. For private use ist o.k. but not for the purpose of making money on other peoples intellectual property.I will never use AI. Anybody else on this forum? If I would do so, I am no longer myself but a thief.
Using AI you're not stealing from anyone in particular or infringing copyright. The results AI systems produce are unique, but based on what it learned from other sources. Similar to what someone could create from memory whilst being inspired by something they've seen.
Quote from: Josephine on November 22, 2023, 13:56Many talk about selling AI images. For private use ist o.k. but not for the purpose of making money on other peoples intellectual property.I will never use AI. Anybody else on this forum? If I would do so, I am no longer myself but a thief.What if there was at some point some AI that you could train on only your own photos?
Personally, I have no interest in doing AI. I enjoy wandering around with my camera and shooting what catches my eye.Sometimes I get to meet other photographers doing the same and we have a good chat.Of course, stock isn't a major income stream for me so I get to pick and choose.
....What if there was at some point some AI that you could train on only your own photos?
I can only answer from the point of view of an illustrator. I easily could generate a coloring book for kids within minutes and sell it on Amazon. Is this fair? without a single stroke, without any knowledge and costs of any software. Its the matter of typing a few words into the search engine and you are done. You can proudly call yourself illustrator. A photographer can easily steal someones sky and use it for the own purpose. The one who spent maybe days waiting for this very sky with this very special light. If anybody feels this is correct, fine.Sorry my English is not perfect.
Quote from: Josephine on November 25, 2023, 03:38I can only answer from the point of view of an illustrator. I easily could generate a coloring book for kids within minutes and sell it on Amazon. Is this fair? without a single stroke, without any knowledge and costs of any software. Its the matter of typing a few words into the search engine and you are done. You can proudly call yourself illustrator. A photographer can easily steal someones sky and use it for the own purpose. The one who spent maybe days waiting for this very sky with this very special light. If anybody feels this is correct, fine.Sorry my English is not perfect.You are using a computer to create your work then offer it online to the entire planet via agencies with the potential to create a million copies or downloads.How is that fair to the real oil painter who painstakingly creates their art on canvas from scratch and probably even makes his own paints and brushes???It used to take YEARS to complete a great painting or portrait.Yet here you are using modern tech to create it in mere hours.How is what you are doing fair to the REAL artists?And even worse if you use a camera, photographers are just one button pushers.If you actually believe what you are saying, you MUST stop using any modern version of photoshop and forgo all modern cameras.And please stop using your smartphone.Because all modern tech will be using ai in the future.Basically - freeze yourself in the tech and software of 2015, or maybe even earlier.Forever.So good luck with that.
You're comparing apples with oranges. So I have to disagree with your statement.If someone creates something, then that person needs visual, linguistic, musical or creative know-how. That is something completely different from typing in prompts.It doesn't matter whether you use a paintbrush, a camera, a guitar, a keyboard, a computer or any other tool.A work created by a human being, be it a painting, a photograph, a poem, a piece of music or whatever, is therefore an achievement that represents a value.The fact that this is the case can be seen in how many images you are not allowed to upload anywhere for commercial purposes - be it an Eames chair, an Apple computer, the light installation on the Eiffel Tower, the Mona Lisa, a Harley Davidson and countless other subjects.This also applies to AI-generated images, which are not allowed to take up these protected works visually. The fact that a normal image contributor does not have the money to legally prosecute the illegal use of their work does not mean that a corporation offering AI software has the right to freely use the work of these "normal" contributors to make money illegally!Anyone who produces something creative - with whatever tool - is the author of that thing. And no artificial intelligence has the right to circumvent that!
I see you're an illustrator, so this may not be relevant to you, but for example the relatively new Denoise is an AI function of Adobe Camera Raw. I'm using that function when needed to rescue high ISO files, so I can't say I'll never use AI, but AFAIK, this use isn't (ab)using other people's IP.
eta...then I am just adjusting the clothes a bit, changing out the sky, removing the glasses, changing the hairstyle...