but a cheap copy compared to a good photograph.
If you ask me, it is a photograph that is cheap.
But how many Artists went out of job, when animation movies were no longer hand drawn, but made with computers?
This is the typical strawman you get when you falsely call AI “just a tool”. It’s like saying a tiger is “just a cat”. AI is arguably the single most advanced tool put out by people to date.
People who moved to digital art had their area of skill remain. They still have to wield the stylus just as they would wield their brush; they still need the ability to draw from memory, mind, knowledge on the laws of motion; little to no intellectual change has to occur. This is clearly not so with AI, which shifts the area and the level of skill necessary. The “lead artist” in your head I would rather call an “idea guy”, and I hate those for a reason – compared to the workers, they’re leeches.
And from what I read, that grunt work has to be sorted out quite thoroghly, what with the missing arms and other mistakes.
You said yourself that skill can be trained to perfection, so this is temporary and clearly not within their ideal. Why talk about this in the first place?
If we scoff at AI usage, we should also scoff at people not drawing on paper and scanning it in.
Again, this logic follows from the previous false equivalence. This is simply false. The jump between paper and digital is far greater than between digital and AI-based.
I would be willing to pay the extra money for a paper-made drawing, but I do not see that as a reason to scoff at digital artists. That does not extend towards AI, because users of AI do nothing artists do.
But if your work as an Artist is mindlessly drawing the same picture in different angles… tough.
Funny how you call art mindless, because I would instead say it is writing text into a cheap AI that is mindless. One is filled with passion, devotion and the determination to make yourself the best you can be; the other is based on greed and the desire to pump out meritless crap as quickly as possible.
There is no positive side to killing skill, because it turns us into slaves and degenerates. This is the road you head down each step you take towards post-scarcity.
There is nothing good about Star Trek’s world. The only reason it is interesting at all is because the writers went out of their way to impose limits on that post-scarcity, i.e. making it not post-scarcity at all. Imagine if that weren’t the case: “Computer, make a program to solve our problem.” Roll credits.