this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2025
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But they conveniently leave out that it costs money to do anything with AI. It's more like "open to anyone with a credit card." The vast majority of people don't have computers powerful enough to run generative AI models locally, and even then, server farms with a billion GPUs will always produce better results

This means that people have to rely on corporate platforms where you buy tokens that you use to get pulls at the various AI slop slot machines, hoping you get something decent. The mechanics more closely resemble a gacha game than any kind of artistic process

By contrast, learning how to draw, animate or make 3D models costs nothing. There's free tutorials and tools everywhere, and you can also just pirate commercial ones if you want

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[–] tim_curry@hexbear.net 58 points 4 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (3 children)

Art was already open to anyone just pick up a fucking pencil

Edit: drawing all the talentless hacks out of the woodwork lol

[–] LeeeroooyJeeenkiiins@hexbear.net 21 points 3 days ago (1 children)

im not going to take a pencil and personally draw a courtroom sketch of Macdonald's The Grimace giving live birth in front of a judge

[–] SovietBeerTruckOperator@hexbear.net 24 points 3 days ago (1 children)

That sounds like a you problem

[–] LeeeroooyJeeenkiiins@hexbear.net 10 points 3 days ago (1 children)

it sounds like a problem for whatever entity has to draw something like that

Stop kinkshaming

[–] Le_Wokisme@hexbear.net 17 points 3 days ago (6 children)

i really hate this reasoning. when people say "i can't draw" they mean "i can't draw what I set out to draw" not that they can't make marks on a paper. People want to make what they have in their head, likely to a level of competence that would be appreciated by an audience beyond their mom, not some other thing that they physically can that will look bad to them and anyone else.

I also dispute OP's assumption that we can all learn to draw competently, i've tried on and off for years with various tutorials and programmes and my brain and hands just do not work that way.

[–] NuraShiny@hexbear.net 22 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (12 children)

Ask any artist if they are satisfied with their art. They won't be. That is the nature of the beast. Doesn't matter how good they are at it.

I have done art on and off for years as well. I would estimate I did maybe a few thousand hours of art in my life. Other people have done literally 10 to 100 times that and they are better because of it. You hone your skills over time. Anyone like me dabbling in art has to accept that there are countless people who put in more time, who are better and who will stay being better because they will keep putting more time in then us.

Using AI, you steal those hours from those people, for a product that doesn't show what's in your head. It's stilly to pretend AI can do that and you know it. If that were true, all the art prompters wouldn't include the names of existing artists in their prompts.

So yea, put in the fucking time, or get off the field. Don't be fucking selfish and then try to defend it in flimsy ways.

[–] bort@hexbear.net 7 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (2 children)

What's being stolen when someone uses genAI to make a picture for personal use? In what way is it selfish?

It's weird if someone acts like they're 'making art', but it's also harmless.

[–] Comrade_Bones@hexbear.net 13 points 3 days ago (4 children)

All of the art that was used to train generative AI was used without its creator's permission, meaning they weren't compensated for all of the years of work and study that went into creating it. Then all of that labour was repackaged into a product that corporations are selling at a premium, with none of the money going back to the people who made the creation of it possible. These companies have well admitted that they wouldn't be able to make a profit if they had to actually pay all these artists for their work. Now obviously, that isn't technically stealing, but neither is it harmless. I personally know several artists who've told me that work has dried up in the years since generative AI became popular, and who are upset that their own work was used to train the machines that are replacing them.

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[–] NuraShiny@hexbear.net 5 points 3 days ago (3 children)

"Hey man I need to see all your text and all your images you ever made."

""Why?"

"So I can make bad collage-copies of them and write shitty listicles."

"I don't want you to do that."

"Too bad, you put your stuff somewhere I could see it so I already did it and you have no recourse now because the powerful people that made me are above copyright law."

There is no personal use with this, because the AI was trained on everyone's stolen information. That is the problem, not the fact that it can make a bad picture because that was done. If the AIs could actually make anything from whole cloth, then we'd be having a different debate, but that's not what's going on.

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[–] SovietBeerTruckOperator@hexbear.net 17 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (6 children)

I mean, yeah this true not everyone can make art up to their desired standards. But everyone can still make art, there's tons of different genres and styles of art, all humans are gonna have the ability to engage with some of them. Maybe not to the level they'll become famous for it but they can do it.

Edit: to provide a personal example, I suck at drawing and painting but I used to do actual paper collage art, which doesn't require you make any images yourself but is instead about the composition of other premade images. With pretty good results.

top one is giving 1990s magic the gathering. sick.

[–] americanzgenozida@thelemmy.club 2 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Aw that's so kool <3 thanks for uploading

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[–] VibeCoder@hexbear.net 8 points 3 days ago (2 children)

I also dispute OP's assumption that we can all learn to draw competently, i've tried on and off for years with various tutorials and programmes and my brain and hands just do not work that way.

I’m curious if you’ve tried https://drawabox.com/

It’s set up to be very rote and effort in = results out. If you like studying and practicing that way, it works a lot differently than the typical advice.

[–] RaisedFistJoker@hexbear.net 7 points 3 days ago

drawabox is one of the worst programs for learning something from scratch i have ever tried. That shit is horrible. I am capable of imagining its good for people who already draw a bit and want to get better, but from scratch its horrible.

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[–] Krauerking@lemy.lol 2 points 2 days ago (8 children)

So you want an audience to adore you but for work you didn't put in?

Also what's competent? Have you ever seen avant garde paintings? Impressionist? Surrealism? Heck you could make your own style based on how your hands do work? There are people that paint with their mouth or feet because they want to put the effort in.

Wanting the reward first is backwards.

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[–] doublepepperoni@hexbear.net 8 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

I'm not categorically against generative AI tools and believe they can be fun and useful. I just don't think you can call their output art. I would compare them to character creators and similar creative tools in video games

You wouldn't call yourself a character designer after making a cool custom fighter in SoulCalibur or an interior designer after making a house in the Sims, but that doesn't take away the fact that both are valid creative outlets

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[–] Des@hexbear.net 8 points 3 days ago

yeah i think there's some ADHD thing that short circuits the connection between my mind image and my fingies

and i doodled and drew for years up until my late teens. also took tons of classes, including drawing classes in college.

luckily I read a lot and apparently could write well (back then at least) and did that instead. but I was always envious of people that can just do the whole "my hand is a printer connected to my brain".

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[–] someone@hexbear.net 37 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Isn't it wonderful that this pseudo-AI has freed humans from having to write and draw and think and dream? We have so much more time to mow lawns and wash dishes and do the laundry.

And work at Amazon fulfillment centers!

[–] gayspacemarxist@hexbear.net 25 points 3 days ago

at least for me, the joy of art is in the process. if you want to replace personal development with a slot machine, feel free i guess. every artistic or musical piece that I make leaves an imprint in my mind and manifests a physical object or vibration in the real world. you could say that AI can take your desire and manifest it, but without the internal struggle between your imagination and the medium the art won't change anything about how you see or understand the world. you might even miss getting a deeper look into what your actual desires / dreams are / mean.

[–] tane@lemmy.zip 6 points 3 days ago

People defending gen AI in these comments proves this place isn’t much different than the rest of lemmy at all lol

[–] LeeeroooyJeeenkiiins@hexbear.net 21 points 3 days ago (1 children)

People are like "art is hard, you hone your skills over time" but that's why i do abstract paintings, there's no difficulty, no skill, just color gettin all fling flanged around. i refuse to get better at it.

[–] mrfugu@hexbear.net 15 points 3 days ago

My 3070/5900 rig runs stable diffusion well enough. The barrier to entry is much more gaming pc than it is server farm but I still agree with the sentiment and don’t agree with the idea that AI makes are accessible. It makes image generation more accessible but there’s a billion tools for tracing that already made shit pretty accessible.

[–] marxisthayaca@hexbear.net 15 points 4 days ago

Yes, but there’s a reason why we gatekeep art. Your average person has no taste and is just horny.

[–] KoboldKomrade@hexbear.net 11 points 3 days ago

I felt MUCH more creative just tracing other's art (for personal practice, they don't survive long enough to be saved). I felt more creative finding a cruddy lego comic I made when I was 8. I felt more creative seeing a pallet my neighbor threw away and taking it to use for scrap wood for maybe making a cat tree. All more creative then trying to wrestle an "ai" to make a blurry ugly mess. The BEST piece I got still had odd eyes and muddy lighting.

I can barely draw a straight line. I can barely TRACE a hand. Yet I've gotten better. If I had the time/energy/drive, I could become decent, even without spending 10 million hours. I've just accepted certain personal limits. Like a slight natural shakey hand. It was frustrating wanting to paint minitures, but I got over it and had a hell of a time painting a simple landscape ala Bob Ross.

I've had a better time THINKING about evangelion and how I might make a game based on all the admin and engineering aspects the anime glances over. Not even the "art" stuff about it... but also thinking about the times it talks about the environment, its relation to late 90s tech, purity, the supposed "accidental" use of abrahamic icons, its seemingly forward projected critic of certain anime tropes, the disatisfaction with there being no clean end of anything human... And I still have to watch more then just the first series.

Besides everything else, I love leftist theory/thought because of the actual freedom it provides. ("Leftist", "Theory" here being a bit loose.) Accepting what is and improving what can and needs to be is such a detoxifying mindset. Perfect would be nice, but sometimes you just can't be, and you have to learn to forget your notions of perfection. I'll probably never get over ~specific, fairly minor, chronic disorder that I shouldn't add to my dox~, but I can tune out the distress 99% of the time, and the 1% I can cope with.

[–] mayo_cider@hexbear.net 8 points 3 days ago

If you believe you are doing art with AI, can a mirror see you when you look into it?

[–] ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml 9 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (2 children)

Running one of these genai art models really isn't that hard and doesn't require incredible top-end hardware.

That isn't really a defense of it, but it does allow some people who otherwise do not have artistic skills to make pictures.

Like, I have aphantasia and can't visually conceptualize anything. Art is very hard for me. I don't think it hurts anyone for me to make a character portrait for my dnd character using automatic1111. Even using an unethical model, I would never pay an artist for a dnd character portrait - it is too expensive for me and while I like having a nice character portrait and it helps me have a better conceptualization of my character, it is not worth the time or money to get a real artist to make one. If not for genai, I'd just go on deviantart and use one somebody already made or like draw a really shitty one.

Plus, if we're going to say software piracy is OK but art piracy isn't, thats a little hypocritical. Software piracy can definitely hurt software devs (especially ones working for smaller companies and even moreso for indie devs) in roughly the same way that art piracy hurts artists.

As a rule I think software piracy is fine if it doesn't hurt anyone (i.e. if you wouldn't have paid for it and it's for noncommercial use). I don't see how art is all that much different. Its completely different if you're using any of this stuff for commercial use to take work away from people who need it and replace it with shitty AI stuff - but I'm not talking about that.

[–] BynarsAreOk@hexbear.net 9 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (3 children)

Plus, if we're going to say software piracy is OK but art piracy isn't, thats a little hypocritical. Software piracy can definitely hurt software devs (especially ones working for smaller companies and even moreso for indie devs) in roughly the same way that art piracy hurts artists.

This is BS how can you even believe its the same? Piracy is about reproduction as is. You download a software, you use it as its made.

AI art is fundamentally different, you're not using it as is, you're taking it, distilling the authors intent and work and claiming as your own, often for a profit.

Again compared that to software piracy, please I hope you're not suggesting the average person who downloaded Photoshop in 2015 was actualy hacking it so they could resell it for $50 called it "TotallyMyOwnPhotoEditingSoftware Pro HD Max 12".

Embarrassing to even write this shit. Barely above "you wouldn't download a car".

Piracy doesn't hurt small devs. This is a stupid myth propagated by the AAA shills. Small devs are far more likely to benefit from piracy since it gives better word of mouth. If someone isn't going to spend $5 or $10 to buy a game to begin with then at least they're very likely to spread the game around, through communities or social media, if your game is actualy good.

Like this is discourse from like 15 years ago I kid you not. Its been debunked for at least since the early days of Steam.

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[–] Comrade_Bones@hexbear.net 8 points 4 days ago (1 children)

As someone who also has aphantasia, but still likes to draw sometimes, this feels so strange for me to read.

I would never pay an artist for a dnd character portrait - it is too expensive for me and while I like having a nice character portrait and it helps me have a better conceptualization of my character, it is not worth the time or money to get a real artist to make one. If not for genai, I'd just go on deviantart and use one somebody already made or like draw a really shitty one.

If you don't consider a drawing of your character to be worth any amount of money that you'd be willing to pay an artist, why do you feel the need to have one at all? And to say you'd go to an artist's page and use one of their character drawings as your own, something that artists famously hate, means that you don't even want to have a better conceptualization of your character since the drawing would just be of someone else's character. Also, I do think that any drawing you make on your own would be infinitely more charming than any generic overly polished piece of art generative AI could spit out.

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[–] plinky@hexbear.net 7 points 3 days ago (7 children)

i mean, it runs on laptops, its interesting to wrangle it with control nets to try to approach what you want, not art tho, more like visual shorthand builder

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