Raw LLM Responses
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Anyone defending AI are just making excuses to be lazy and steal. I rarely say s…
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They're too obsessed with automating everything.
If nobody works, no one has any…
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We need a cold calculating robot to *optimally* minimize pay for employees. Huma…
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G
Sometimes I feel like a canary in a coal mine. I try to tell people this is goin…
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So we should stop and let China and other countries develop the technology and l…
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If you set rules like one-word answers to an AI bot all you will get is theater.…
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Well, considering what's called IA today is some fancy LLMs ... I wouldn't bet o…
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Can 60 Minuten Interview Suchir Balajis mother please? He was a Software engieer…
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Comment
@thewannabecritic7490 I appreciate you taking the time to respond—these conversations matter, even when we disagree. Let me walk through your points.
1. “It scrapes data without consent.”
This comes down to two things: consent and automation.
On consent: Once you post something publicly—on Twitter, YouTube, an art portfolio, anywhere—you lose a certain degree of control over how others might engage with it. People can screencap it, save it, reference it, study it, or simply remember it. Even if you ask them not to, there’s no way to prevent it. That’s not ideal, but it’s the nature of public expression online. And ethically, that’s part of the trade-off: others can learn from your work. Not plagiarize it, not pass it off as their own—but use it to inform or inspire their own creations.
Functionally, there's little difference between a person saving your art to study and an AI model training on it—both use your work as input to guide future output, without directly copying it.
Now, automation: some argue that because AI systems ingest data in bulk rather than “learning like a person,” the process becomes unethical. But that’s an emotional argument, not a logical one. Speed and scale don’t automatically turn fair use into theft. If it’s legal and ethical for a human to learn from public work, it doesn’t become wrong just because a machine does it faster.
2. “Prompting isn’t a skill.”
I’ve worked in both photography and AI art, and I’ll tell you this: both allow for high-effort and low-effort results. You can snap a quick photo—or spend hours on composition, lighting, timing, post-processing. The same is true of AI art.
Sure, anyone can type “fantasy elf woman” and get something generic. But if you want a specific face, outfit, lighting setup, mood, pose—and want it consistent across multiple generations—that takes real skill. Not just in prompting, but in understanding how models, LoRAs, ControlNet and other tools interact. It’s a different kind of skill than drawing—but it’s still a skill.
Would you tell someone who decided—just to be different—to use a CAD program to 'draw' a character by creating a bunch of solids and defining their dimensions that what they made isn’t valid because they “just typed in numbers”? Even deeply technical workflows can be artistic—art and math have always overlapped more than we like to admit. You might not consider it your kind of art—and that’s totally fair. That doesn’t make it meaningless or invalid as artistic expression.
3. “AI doesn’t show learning; meaning comes from effort.”
You’re free to dislike Pollock, or AI art, or anything else that feels empty to you. That’s personal taste. Taste alone doesn’t get to decide what counts as “real art” for everyone else.
Effort isn’t the only measure of meaning. Speed doesn’t negate creativity. There’s real artistic intent when someone uses AI to visualize a character, build a world, explore a mood they couldn’t otherwise create. That’s still learning. Still iteration. Still art—just expressed through a different set of tools.
If you try using something like Stable Diffusion—not just typing in a quick prompt, but seriously engaging with it—you’ll find it’s far more involved than it seems from the outside. People doing meaningful AI work aren’t just pushing a button. They’re crafting, tuning, refining. It’s creative, and it’s technical.
In short: you don’t have to like AI art. But dismissing it as “not real,” or assuming it involves no effort or skill, simply doesn’t reflect how the tools work or how people are using them. The world is changing. The tools are evolving. And if we want to shape where that goes—not just react to it—we need to understand it first.
youtube
Viral AI Reaction
2025-06-02T19:5…
Coding Result
| Dimension | Value |
|---|---|
| Responsibility | user |
| Reasoning | consequentialist |
| Policy | none |
| Emotion | indifference |
| Coded at | 2026-04-27T06:26:44.938723 |
Raw LLM Response
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{"id":"ytr_UgwA2H1NH6Ay0v_Vu-14AaABAg.AIfinnGaxW3AJ6f6CDfpyJ","responsibility":"none","reasoning":"consequentialist","policy":"industry_self","emotion":"approval"},
{"id":"ytr_UgzjEEwNlJGP6qezPUt4AaABAg.AIbjA1ZEJoJAIcBShRziLT","responsibility":"none","reasoning":"virtue","policy":"none","emotion":"resignation"}
]