I'm not fighting against it. I'm demanding regulation and openness in the process, which includes what are the sources that the AI is pulling from to learn. Why? Because it is limited in its transformative capabilities, because it just sequences words. It doesn't draw from experience, it doesn't share insight on humanity, and it's not the same process.To counter, rather than blindly fighting tooth and nail against technological progression, it may be more productive to acknowledge the new technology, embrace it, and work to discover the best ways to utilize it and begin the inevitable transition into a new status quo in terms of the monetization of art.
I'm not against it. I'm demanding rules around it and openness and transparency in a way that makes it clear this is a distinct product from human creation.
Laws should not be written with just the present in mind, there should be some thought as to the impact further down the road.
And, I gotta be honest, I'm simply not frightened by what AI could mean for humanity. Maybe with a competitor, we'll finally get our collective act together.
I'm hardly frightened or saying ban all AI. I am asking for rules and regulations that product human interests in the creative endeavors, something uniquely human. Right now, the presentation is, "Accept it."
And I won't without significant caveats and a demand for people to actually think about the consequences.