@Kittiesandwaffl See I'm still on the fence on this sort of stuff but I do ultimately agree. At the end of the day you can call yourself whatever you want :D
@BluEucliffe Oh! I like it because it looks like ass. No really im serious. I find an ironic enjoyment in watching the animation or picture lobotomize itself.
@Zero0Ex I think its cause of 2 things. One being that a good amount of people don' truly understand the process, and the other being that everybody broke. I'm not sure how many people working retail or fast food have the funds for a commission (price is fair btw)
@Keritaki@AshrVT Im... sadly working fast food right now. Trying to get my CompTia courses done so I can get into network security. I actually do have issues with AI despite me trying to defend it, mainly the oversaturation of it as well as the environmental issues that come about from that.
@Keritaki@AshrVT Then following your logic that would make the AI program itself the artist. Which... would cause alot of issues with things like copyright law. (I'm glad you are actively having a back and forth with me btw. I have a great respect for that. I'mma throw you a follow!)
@Keritaki@AshrVT Such as which model to generate the piece in, or the graphical fidelity of the generated work. Its not traditionally artistic, almost more like a science. ...kind of like how cooking is both an art and a science
@Keritaki@AshrVT True! But I think we can both agree that there is still intention there. Besides the obvious like the paint color; you could consider the brush size that is used or the force and angle the brush is flicked in. An Ai arr piece also has those considerations.
@Keritaki@AshrVT I can actually. First regard is the wording of the prompt itself to steer the predictive engine into the results you need. Second is... well, rolling the dice over and over, or directly editing the proverbial block of clay yoi are left with