• Tartas1995@discuss.tchncs.de
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    21 hours ago

    They are dehumanizing everyone else too.

    Can you think of anyone precise and clear enough in their speech that some “needless” repetition and context wouldn’t drastically improve your understanding of what they say?

    Can you imagine how upset they would be if you took them by their very word and not what they meant?

    In their mind, authors (and probably everyone else) are machines. The kindness of trying to truly understand them is not given. They should be “flawless”.

    • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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      21 hours ago

      It also makes them unable to understand art. They think art is when something looks or sounds nice, they have no appreciation for anything deeper than that because for them the art is a commodity alienated from the labor that produced it.

      • Tartas1995@discuss.tchncs.de
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        21 hours ago

        100% that is why they only appreciate realistic art styles and I guess super trendy stuff like ghibli.

        And of course, “appreciate” is doing a lot of heavy lifting here.

        • sthetic@lemmy.ca
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          18 hours ago

          It’s a shame, because classic Ghibli movies are not shallow or inhumane at all. They were not based on trends. Miyazaki could not have made such beautiful films if he had not had real life experiences.

          “The dragon is supposed to fall from down the air vent, but, being a dragon, it doesn’t land on the ground,” Miyazaki says. “It attaches itself to the wall, like a gecko. And then—ow!—it falls—thud!—it should fall like a serpent. Have you ever seen a snake fall out of a tree?” He explains that it “doesn’t slither, but holds its position.” He looks around at the animators, most of whom appear to be in their twenties and early thirties. They are taking notes, looking grave: nobody has seen a snake fall out of a tree.

          Miyazaki goes on to describe how the dragon—a protean creature named Haku, who sometimes takes this form—struggles when he is pinned down. “This will be tricky,” Miyazaki says, smiling. “If you want to get an idea, go to an eel restaurant and see how an eel is gutted.” The director wriggles around in his seat, imitating the action of a recalcitrant eel. “Have you ever seen an eel resisting?” Miyazaki asks.

          “No, actually,” admits a young man with hipster glasses, an orange sweatshirt, and an indoor pallor.

          Miyazaki groans. “Japanese culture is doomed!” he says.

          Even if we accept that the AI-using guy is correct - that he takes two minutes to formulate the perfect query, and gets a successful response based on that - he had to read books in order to know how to do that.

          The people currently using AI were alive before it existed. They gained an education in a more traditional way, which perhaps allows them to take shortcuts using AI.

          In the future, if nobody reads books, they will be even less able to prompt AI or to evaluate its responses.