| Fully agree on everything you said. In addition, we're all kind of forced to hop on to AI whether we're a programmer or artist just to buy ourselves a little more time, delaying the inevitable. Actually, perhaps accelerating the inevitable by contributing to it. Even in an utopian world where we would have an economic model to support this (UBI), the outcome still sucks. It wipes out human culture. There's no point in creating/producing anything as almost anything can be produced by anyone, at incredible quality, at no cost and with little skill. Hence, your daughter being or becoming an incredible artist would have no meaning, except perhaps for herself enjoying the process of creating art. |
There are lots of points and arguments to be made in this general area, but I have to ask, is this really so bad? I mean, what is the point of our lives and everything we do, other than to generally spend the rest of our time doing things we enjoy for their own sake?
If we're comparing "your daughter is an incredible artist, and here's a job for her designing product packaging for a multinational conglomerate" to "your daughter is an incredible artist, and the multinational conglomerate is using a diffusion model to design their packaging", I think it's really hard to say that the former is better than the latter. Of course, it all depends on the economic model, but the line I am quoting is within that assumption you made of the economic model being able to support this. In that case, I am for the latter wholeheartedly.
Economic incentives are great to get people "hustling", but they are rarely aligned with the human values you wish to protect, and mostly by chance if they are. Your daughter's artistry is better "spent" on art for art's (and personal enjoyment's) sake than on drawing clip art for an obscure HR form somewhere, IMO.