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Oh hell yeah

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  • B [email protected]

    Okay, so how do you make minion memes with it? I have no clue myself

    G This user is from outside of this forum
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    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #15

    https://deepai.org/machine-learning-model/text2img

    put words in. submit.

    1000001692

    1 Reply Last reply
    4
    • underpantsweevil@lemmy.worldU [email protected]

      Bizarre AI-generated images are currently flooding Facebook, as engagement hacks and bots run rampant on the social media platform, spawning a meme-worthy image that has been dubbed “Shrimp Jesus.”

      S This user is from outside of this forum
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      [email protected]
      wrote on last edited by
      #16

      It’s actually working, many people around me that were enthusiastic about AI are now pissed off by it thanks to all that shit.

      M 1 Reply Last reply
      8
      • S [email protected]

        Too bad the supreme court put the dagger in artists backs for AI already. It would have been great if a company would license an artists source material to make a set of variations for a limited venue. Like a company licensing a voice actor's samples, then they get to use AI to make those characters say whatever they want, in that one movie, or that one game, based on the license.

        As it is now, we're going to end up with Spruce Lee fighting Hackie Chan movies, and none of the actors or their estates will get to say shit about it.

        X This user is from outside of this forum
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        [email protected]
        wrote on last edited by [email protected]
        #17

        You don't really know how AI works, do you? A single voice actor couldn't produce enough lines to fully train an AI model even if they spent every second of their life in the recording booth.

        So tell me then, which of the billions of input recordings do you pay licensing fees for and how much? I mean sure, we could make a law that forces AI companies to pay for every single piece of training data. Which would probably kill AI training for the entire region where this law applies, severely crippling our already weakened economy. But I guess, at least we're keeping the moral high ground while doing so.

        But seriously, the EU is cooking up a pretty amazing Ai law right now. Thought out by people far brighter than you and me and it seems to be pretty amazing at balancing economic interests with ethical obligation. My hopes are high for that one!

        S S D S 4 Replies Last reply
        3
        • ladybutterfly@lemmy.worldL [email protected]
          This post did not contain any content.
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          [email protected]
          wrote on last edited by
          #18

          I like it.

          It's the "Use your kid's slang to make them realize it's garbage" reverse card.

          F 1 Reply Last reply
          12
          • X [email protected]

            You don't really know how AI works, do you? A single voice actor couldn't produce enough lines to fully train an AI model even if they spent every second of their life in the recording booth.

            So tell me then, which of the billions of input recordings do you pay licensing fees for and how much? I mean sure, we could make a law that forces AI companies to pay for every single piece of training data. Which would probably kill AI training for the entire region where this law applies, severely crippling our already weakened economy. But I guess, at least we're keeping the moral high ground while doing so.

            But seriously, the EU is cooking up a pretty amazing Ai law right now. Thought out by people far brighter than you and me and it seems to be pretty amazing at balancing economic interests with ethical obligation. My hopes are high for that one!

            S This user is from outside of this forum
            S This user is from outside of this forum
            [email protected]
            wrote on last edited by
            #19

            what confuses me a lot about america is how a lot of people will defend the AI's "right" to steal training data to learn (education)

            when there's millions of students out there going into life long debt to go to collage, and none of the same americans are fighting for their right to learn for free

            X a_wild_mimic_appears@lemmy.dbzer0.comA 2 Replies Last reply
            5
            • S [email protected]

              what confuses me a lot about america is how a lot of people will defend the AI's "right" to steal training data to learn (education)

              when there's millions of students out there going into life long debt to go to collage, and none of the same americans are fighting for their right to learn for free

              X This user is from outside of this forum
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              [email protected]
              wrote on last edited by
              #20

              1st, I'm not Murrican, I'm German.
              2nd the right to free education is one of the most important human right and the entire world is paying the price right now for neglecting this right over the past decades
              3rd AI is here to stay. It's far to impactfull as a technology. Whether we like it or not. So we either create an Environment where it can thrive within certain rules or we watch as others use it to completely overtake us.

              S P 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • X [email protected]

                1st, I'm not Murrican, I'm German.
                2nd the right to free education is one of the most important human right and the entire world is paying the price right now for neglecting this right over the past decades
                3rd AI is here to stay. It's far to impactfull as a technology. Whether we like it or not. So we either create an Environment where it can thrive within certain rules or we watch as others use it to completely overtake us.

                S This user is from outside of this forum
                S This user is from outside of this forum
                [email protected]
                wrote on last edited by
                #21

                ok? and i'm polish, i was talking about americans.

                AI is not just ethically dubious, it'd also outright harmful for the already strained environment we live in. If AI stays - it won't be here for long, mostly because there won't be anoyone to ask it to generate giant hentai tits anymore

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • X [email protected]

                  You don't really know how AI works, do you? A single voice actor couldn't produce enough lines to fully train an AI model even if they spent every second of their life in the recording booth.

                  So tell me then, which of the billions of input recordings do you pay licensing fees for and how much? I mean sure, we could make a law that forces AI companies to pay for every single piece of training data. Which would probably kill AI training for the entire region where this law applies, severely crippling our already weakened economy. But I guess, at least we're keeping the moral high ground while doing so.

                  But seriously, the EU is cooking up a pretty amazing Ai law right now. Thought out by people far brighter than you and me and it seems to be pretty amazing at balancing economic interests with ethical obligation. My hopes are high for that one!

                  S This user is from outside of this forum
                  S This user is from outside of this forum
                  [email protected]
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #22

                  A single voice actor couldn't produce enough lines to fully train an AI model...

                  The model is trained on a massive corpus of existing data and then fine tuned to match the target voice actor. Using less than ~30s of reference audio you can get a pretty decent fine tuning the main issue is that it currently isn't on par with the quality and consistency of an in studio voice actor, especially over long time domains.

                  X 1 Reply Last reply
                  2
                  • X [email protected]

                    1st, I'm not Murrican, I'm German.
                    2nd the right to free education is one of the most important human right and the entire world is paying the price right now for neglecting this right over the past decades
                    3rd AI is here to stay. It's far to impactfull as a technology. Whether we like it or not. So we either create an Environment where it can thrive within certain rules or we watch as others use it to completely overtake us.

                    P This user is from outside of this forum
                    P This user is from outside of this forum
                    [email protected]
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #23

                    AI is here to stay. It's far to impactfull as a technology

                    Gonna need some proof for that. So far it doesn't actually do anything useful.

                    H 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • M [email protected]

                      a_wild_mimic_appears@lemmy.dbzer0.comA This user is from outside of this forum
                      a_wild_mimic_appears@lemmy.dbzer0.comA This user is from outside of this forum
                      [email protected]
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #24

                      Gabe Omaey

                      B 1 Reply Last reply
                      5
                      • P [email protected]

                        AI is here to stay. It's far to impactfull as a technology

                        Gonna need some proof for that. So far it doesn't actually do anything useful.

                        H This user is from outside of this forum
                        H This user is from outside of this forum
                        [email protected]
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #25

                        Open your eyes and step off that hate bandwagon.

                        Machine Learning has revolutionized protein folding and plenty of other sciences. LLMs have increased programmer productivity (even if it isn't perfect yet). Image/video/song generating was something we thought to be impossible a couple of years ago.

                        If the only news you get about AI comes from the "Fuck AI" community, you won't ever get accurate info.

                        Yes companies put AI in a bunch of shitty things that don't need it. But to claim AI doesn't do anything useful is just plain wrong.

                        P 1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • S [email protected]

                          what confuses me a lot about america is how a lot of people will defend the AI's "right" to steal training data to learn (education)

                          when there's millions of students out there going into life long debt to go to collage, and none of the same americans are fighting for their right to learn for free

                          a_wild_mimic_appears@lemmy.dbzer0.comA This user is from outside of this forum
                          a_wild_mimic_appears@lemmy.dbzer0.comA This user is from outside of this forum
                          [email protected]
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #26

                          I am only critical that those models are in the hand of corporations who try to profit from it. Copyrights are mainly a tool to be wielded by the powerful: see Sony trying to disconnect ISP accounts en masse or media giants suing people into oblivion, Nintendo fucking over their fanbase again and again and so on.

                          The datasets should belong to an UN organisation like UNESCO, corporations/NGOs/people should be able to licence them to build their models (ev. with "community models" provided free for personal use), and the licence fees should be used to subsidize culture. This plus an UBI would make sure that artists don't have to starve, corporations can use them to try to make a profit, and everyone else can use them to create for their own or their communities use. Artists that don't want to go into the datasets have that right too, but also won't have access to that financial pool (this shouldn't be the only pool).

                          Fuck copyrights.

                          D Z 2 Replies Last reply
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                          • ladybutterfly@lemmy.worldL [email protected]
                            This post did not contain any content.
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                            wrote on last edited by
                            #27

                            Aren't they doing this already? Seriously have any of you been on facebook. It's full of that crap.

                            A B 2 Replies Last reply
                            32
                            • M [email protected]

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                              [email protected]
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #28

                              This used to be a $1200 commission.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              29
                              • X [email protected]

                                You don't really know how AI works, do you? A single voice actor couldn't produce enough lines to fully train an AI model even if they spent every second of their life in the recording booth.

                                So tell me then, which of the billions of input recordings do you pay licensing fees for and how much? I mean sure, we could make a law that forces AI companies to pay for every single piece of training data. Which would probably kill AI training for the entire region where this law applies, severely crippling our already weakened economy. But I guess, at least we're keeping the moral high ground while doing so.

                                But seriously, the EU is cooking up a pretty amazing Ai law right now. Thought out by people far brighter than you and me and it seems to be pretty amazing at balancing economic interests with ethical obligation. My hopes are high for that one!

                                D This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote on last edited by
                                #29

                                In Spain we trained an AI using recorded congress sessions. Within the national, regional and city halls they had a lot of material.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • H [email protected]

                                  Open your eyes and step off that hate bandwagon.

                                  Machine Learning has revolutionized protein folding and plenty of other sciences. LLMs have increased programmer productivity (even if it isn't perfect yet). Image/video/song generating was something we thought to be impossible a couple of years ago.

                                  If the only news you get about AI comes from the "Fuck AI" community, you won't ever get accurate info.

                                  Yes companies put AI in a bunch of shitty things that don't need it. But to claim AI doesn't do anything useful is just plain wrong.

                                  P This user is from outside of this forum
                                  P This user is from outside of this forum
                                  [email protected]
                                  wrote on last edited by [email protected]
                                  #30

                                  Machine Learning has revolutionized protein folding and plenty of other sciences.

                                  I actually work in the field of protein crystallography. Contrary to newspaper reporting by people who don't understand the field and just repeat what the people who developed the tool say about it, it has made just a small improvement to analysing experimental data which we could have easily made using traditional algorithmic approaches with a similar amount of resources spent. And this is one of its biggest legitimate impacts - it absolutely hasn't "revolutionised plenty of other sciences", or you'd be able to list more things than just alphafold.

                                  It doesn't improve programmer productivity, it increases the lines of code created, which is a really bad metric for productivity. There is good evidence that its use is already leading to increased code churn, that means someone is having to go back and revisit the additional new errors introduced by AI tools, which is obviously less productive.

                                  X H 2 Replies Last reply
                                  2
                                  • P [email protected]

                                    Machine Learning has revolutionized protein folding and plenty of other sciences.

                                    I actually work in the field of protein crystallography. Contrary to newspaper reporting by people who don't understand the field and just repeat what the people who developed the tool say about it, it has made just a small improvement to analysing experimental data which we could have easily made using traditional algorithmic approaches with a similar amount of resources spent. And this is one of its biggest legitimate impacts - it absolutely hasn't "revolutionised plenty of other sciences", or you'd be able to list more things than just alphafold.

                                    It doesn't improve programmer productivity, it increases the lines of code created, which is a really bad metric for productivity. There is good evidence that its use is already leading to increased code churn, that means someone is having to go back and revisit the additional new errors introduced by AI tools, which is obviously less productive.

                                    X This user is from outside of this forum
                                    X This user is from outside of this forum
                                    [email protected]
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #31

                                    As a software engineer, I can tell you that it absolutely has increase productivity. Especially for small tasks without too much complexity. AI is really good for prototyping. The problems you hear about are mostly people who have no idea how to write propper code trying to mask their incompetence by writing AI code.

                                    I usually outright reject code that is obviously AI. But I employ plenty of AI in my own coding. The trick is to always double check and rewrite segments that aren't good enough.

                                    The huge amount of garbage AI PRs ate an enormous problem. Especially for small open source projects. But the benefits are also pretty obvious.

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • X [email protected]

                                      You don't really know how AI works, do you? A single voice actor couldn't produce enough lines to fully train an AI model even if they spent every second of their life in the recording booth.

                                      So tell me then, which of the billions of input recordings do you pay licensing fees for and how much? I mean sure, we could make a law that forces AI companies to pay for every single piece of training data. Which would probably kill AI training for the entire region where this law applies, severely crippling our already weakened economy. But I guess, at least we're keeping the moral high ground while doing so.

                                      But seriously, the EU is cooking up a pretty amazing Ai law right now. Thought out by people far brighter than you and me and it seems to be pretty amazing at balancing economic interests with ethical obligation. My hopes are high for that one!

                                      S This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #32

                                      AI deepfakes are all over the place right now. Or did you think the video of Trump being a rock star was real?

                                      X 1 Reply Last reply
                                      3
                                      • S [email protected]

                                        A single voice actor couldn't produce enough lines to fully train an AI model...

                                        The model is trained on a massive corpus of existing data and then fine tuned to match the target voice actor. Using less than ~30s of reference audio you can get a pretty decent fine tuning the main issue is that it currently isn't on par with the quality and consistency of an in studio voice actor, especially over long time domains.

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                                        X This user is from outside of this forum
                                        [email protected]
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #33

                                        Hence my usage of the words "fully train". The other commentor wants to license every piece of audio used in training the model which obviously includes the base model...

                                        S 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • S [email protected]

                                          AI deepfakes are all over the place right now. Or did you think the video of Trump being a rock star was real?

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                                          [email protected]
                                          wrote on last edited by [email protected]
                                          #34

                                          Ok? And what does this have to do with anything I wrote?

                                          Edit: Oh, I get it. You misread the first paragraph and completely ignored the second which made you completely miss the point of my comment.

                                          I'm not saying that you can't specialize AI to sound like a specific actor. I'm saying that you can't train a new AI model using only recordings of a single actor.

                                          S O 2 Replies Last reply
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