0 Members and 6 Guests are viewing this topic.
I just trying to think at what point does it no longer become financially feasible to keep creating and uploading new content, although I know for many this has already become a reality with the 'race to the bottom'.
Look at SS's short video in their press release - "No time? No budget? No designer? No problem!"
I think it's interesting that this is "Investor Day" - not something focused on building the business or adding customers. I don't remember them doing a "Customer Day" or a "Contributor Day" at any point
And that's the watermark? Right click and save, it's a 1024 JPG, I just added websize for this post.Select, content aware fill, brush the edges with the healing tool = free image.
The only good thing about AI is that artists can use it to create new (computer-aided) art, it can save time and increase quality, and open up ways for artists to visualize their ideas.The downsides in the future:- Oversupply of AI generated images/video, the market will become saturated if it hasn't already. What was once considered a genuine talent or hard work (in drawing, photography, painting or animation) will at some point be replaced by AI. - The microstock industry will be disrupted, causing those who fall behind to go out of business due to oversupply/diminishing revenue; perhaps agencies will create their own collections, or together with a handful of contributors who have embraced AI as a tool.- It will be more and more difficult to distinguish between 'real & handcrafted' vs 'computer generated'. (Although this is already a thing with cgi in general, like deepfakes). People might question the authenticity of a photo or artwork, i.e. is it the work of manual labor and talent or was it made by a computer? Is the person in a photo a real living person or AI-generated?I think the AI trend is unstoppable, and every attempt to postpone it is futile. It's a matter of time before it's here and microstock industry (as well as other industries related to art) will change. The sooner we embrace it, the better. We should however make sure we get compensated fairly for the use of our work in this new technology.
Today editorial photography is less profitable than commercial photography, also because of its reduced shelf life.
Quote from: Zero Talent on March 24, 2023, 09:06Today editorial photography is less profitable than commercial photography, also because of its reduced shelf life.True, but my editorial photos only made like 5% of my income and my commercial ones 95%, so I don't really see how that's going to bring in enough income to live from, at least for me.
funny how those decrying AI say AI generated art (no quotes!) is poor quality are saying they can't compete with it!
Today editorial photography is less profitable than commercial photography, also because of its reduced shelf life.This trend will be reversed.Training AI takes a lot of time and is very expensive. That puts it many months (maybe half a year or more) behind the present.So even when AI imagery will become dominant, there will always be a need for news photographers. Maybe the price for editorials will even go up since many photographers will bail out and those doing editorials will end up in short supply.Maybe the same will be valid for a niche of commercial photography depicting changes in our environment (e.g. city skylines). This is why it's important for photographers doing this type of photography to opt out of AI training schemes (or else they will reduce the shelf life of their work).PS and side note: many "white collar" "office" jobs will also be replaced by AI, while some "blue collar" jobs (harder to automate) will become more valued, reversing another trend that started with the industrial revolution.
Quote from: Her Ugliness on March 24, 2023, 13:22Quote from: Zero Talent on March 24, 2023, 09:06Today editorial photography is less profitable than commercial photography, also because of its reduced shelf life.True, but my editorial photos only made like 5% of my income and my commercial ones 95%, so I don't really see how that's going to bring in enough income to live from, at least for me.but that's been the trend for years as MS agencies reduced royalties. anyone who expected to make a living just from ms should have been aware of this for many years.funny how those decrying AI say AI generated art (no quotes!) is poor quality are saying they can't compete with it!