Art

The AI Bunny – an Update

18 months ago I wrote this about AI.

Wow, how things have changed so quickly. AI has evolved so much, and I wish to update me views on this while I can.

Let’s start with AI Art: A whole new genre of “art” has sprung up in the last 8~12 months. In this art, regular joes like you and I who have put no effort into learning how to draw or paint because it was too hard, can become artists. Anyone can go to an AI Bot (Like Chat GPT, or many, many others) type in what they want to have a picture of, and the art style, and it will make the picture for you.

Some websites not only condone this, but promote it over traditional artists, who put a lot of effort into it. Here the issue. I love the idea that people can use this to visualize things, but again this should not be usable for paid work. Artists have it hard enough as is, and people don’t give them the credit they deserve for the effort.

I use AI Art on this very Blog, but I do not get paid here. And the moment I get enough viewers, to be paid, I will have switched over to real photographers, and artists. For me, I feel it is more ethical to have an AI Photo, or picture on my blog than to steal pictures from other people’s websites.

Writing: There are now whole AI systems created focused on writing prose. They are marketed everywhere. They are fast and easy. You take the Beats of your chapter (The checklist of what will happen in this chapter), input that. Fill in a few spots about your characters, and world relevant to the chapter, and push go.

They will even read the previous chapters to make sure your flow works. They are marketed as a way to get first drafts done. But it takes very little effort to take the prose from one AI and have another AI edit it, into a “Publishable Draft”

I did dabble in this back when I wrote the last article. The problem is, it’s addictive. I was using it for drafts, but then I found myself tempted to go beyond. I was using it to write my second and 3rd novels. I am starting an AI Detox for my writing now, as I was finding it harder and harder to put words down of my own. This is counter productive, and I am now rewriting all of the things I had for my two current novels.

Reading: Yes, AI is now influencing our Reading patterns. Every time I open a file in Acrobat Reader, it offers to summarize the file for me. I may open an old Novel file I have from years ago, and it is offereing to summarize it. Nobody wants that.

This forces us to come up with other formats to read from, again. and this just makes our lives more difficult, not easier.

Celebrities / Conversations: This one has gone crazy. People have gone from having conversations with AI versions of real people of fictional characters to having relationships with AI Girlfriends and Boyfriends.

I understand loneliness, trust me. But unfortunately this will lead to more isolation. If your boyfriend or girlfriend are AI, they will never disagree with you. You will never learn to deal with conflict in a relationship, or how to respect another’s point of view. You will become more difficult to be around because your social skills and social expectations will plummet.

This one is terrifying. But on top of this, there is now a completely AI Celebrity. This is taking Virtual Celebrities a bit too far. Let’s do a quick comparison from over the years.

When I was younger there was a band called “Prozzak” from Canada, that was a Virtual Band. They were not an online thing, as the Internet was not really a thing then. But their Music was played by real people, and all their videos focused on 2 cartoon characters. Their real names was not revealed for a long time, so people only knew them as the characters from the cartoon music videos.

Things like this happened for a long time, and is the basic premise for Hatsune Miku. But there was always a Human behind the voice, and the personality.

Take that out of the equation, and what do you have? Social Programming. A Computer deciding what people should watch and listen too. (I know Youtube, TicToc, and others already do this, but there is still a person on those videos).

There is no upside to a completely Artificial Person in the Arts at this point in history. Maybe there will be, but It is a scary slope where we are removing people from the arts, and forcing them into the more difficult, and emotionally meaningless jobs.

Not the direction we want to move.

Rules of Robotics: Ai has already been tested and failed to see if it would harm humans. It chose to do so. So Now is the time to force the 3 rules of Robotics into the system

  • Law 1: A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
  • Law 2: A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
  • Law 3: A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

Looking back, I know it is a great tool. We can do so much with AI, but it is addictive, and we can easily become dependant on it to do things we shouldn’t be. So please be aware of your AI usage. Work on your Art Skills, or your writing skills, or your Musical skills (Yes that is easily done by AI now too).

Take time to get better at what you love. Don’t cheapen it by asking an AI bot to do it for you.

Something Psycho This Way Comes – 25 years later.

When I was in High School, I made some good friends. All of us were a bit odd. I had my ASD, another member had MS (multiple sclerosis). We had a goth boy who dressed in all black and wanted to be a vampire. This was the Buffy the Vampire Slayer era, not the Twilight Era, so big mean, demonic vampires, not sparkly lonely vampires.

We had a girl who was very vocal about her rights as a woman (shaved her head like Sinead O’Connor). And two “ordinary” guys. We all liked anime, and that was what tied us together. We were an unofficial Anime club at High School. But at that time, Anime was mostly unheard of. People didn’t connect Astro-boy, or Speed Racer to Anime, and so the only example people thought of was Sailor Moon. You can imagine this made us very unpopular. Tie that with our other unusual characteristics, we started calling ourselves the “Psychosix” (there were six of us to start with).

By college time, our numbers had fluctuated, a few people left, and other joined. By the time we finished college there was around 20 of us. We had a website (Psychosix.com) where we posted our art, our songs, our writings, and our comics. We had all created Original Characters to base our stories around, and it was just a way for us to express ourselves.

Over the years, the Psychosix has drifted apart mostly. I am able to contact about half of them, but don’t do so often. The other half have moved on with their lives, and are spread around the world.

I, being the pack-rat that I am, have most of the files on my back-up. And have decided to start re-releasing updated versions. (My Gateways novel I am working on is one of these).  When I use other people work, or art, I contact them if I can to ask permission.

Our member from Los Angeles, Fritters had made comics using sprites from an online avatar making system. I am taking those and using AI, fixing them up. (I know AI Art is not popular with a lot. I am not a great artist anymore, and time is not my friend, so please understand).

I will post these comics up as I finish them.

Each time I do, I will post a profile of one of the characters.

This week is “Robyn Goodfellow”

And the Comic is “Something Psycho This Way Comes #2.

The AI Bunny is coming…

Beware the AI Bunny.

I just had a week long holiday from work for Spring Break. This extended from Easter, through Qing Ming (Chinese Tomb sweeping day) until the end of the week.

My family had a good time, as normal just relaxing, our Easter was lovely. During this holiday, however I seem to keep running into the topic of AI. My friends use it, my older two children use it, and I myself use it.

Did you know, that you can have a chat with a book character as if they were alive? There is an AI website for that. My daughter uses it to talk to characters before trying to draw them. That’s cool.

What was a bit unnerving was that the same website let’s you have fake conversations with celebrities and politicians… Yikes. This could lead to some strange situations if AI celebrity is realistic enough that someone believes they have a bond or friendship with Real celebrity, and tries to act on that.

AI is used in art. This use has been very loud in the news and social circles. And I think we can all agree that the systems that steal styles and art from living artists is not ok. However there are AI systems that help you with your own art. You upload samples, and it helps you tweak your own work, by either changing the angle or lighting. This I believe is a great use. And I am all for this use, but stealing is never cool.

There is AI out there to help songwriters, and prose writers. I personally have been tinkering with a writing assistant and it has helped me get back to work on novels I started years ago. I am working on 3 of them again. And if I get to publication level, I will mention it here first.

What I have noticed is that, if left to it’s own AI writing contradicts itself and repeats facts multiple times. I had a chapter where the main character’s wife is supposed to be manning a stall at a street market, but the AI had her walking around with her husband, at the same time she was explaining things to children at her stall… And characters that hated her were kind and giving free gifts for their anniversary (which was not even close the this event…) So it is important to not rely on it to write for you, but to use it to help write.

As a teacher, AI helps us with report card comments and lesson planning. When we go back to work tomorrow, there is a half day training for us waiting on the AI tools that are available to make life easier. I have to say, some comments were easier to write with the AI, some I just breezed through on my own.

Teachers and students have been exposed to learning algorithms for years. Most educational websites run them. The problem with these sites is simply they miss the human factor. Sure the reading app can analyze the speed of a child’s reading or their written response to a book. However it does not take into account that it is being read at 11:00 at night by a child that just spent most of their day in classes and should be asleep.

I have had to adjust student levels on reading apps enough over the years after sitting and listening to them read during the class time, and the assure the parents. I also have to keep reminding parents that children need 8-10 hours of sleep.

I know there has been a lot of fear about AI lately, and after looking into it myself I can say clearly that as long as the creativity and empathy stay human, let the machines deal with the slog. I know many people fear for their jobs and don’t want to be turned into an “AI prompt engineer.” Just remember, machines break down, and make mistakes do to not understanding reality. We will always be here for quality control, and realigning the machine.

I do however really hope that Asimov’s 3 laws of robotics are going to be forced to be included in the core code … Just in case…

For those who don’t know…

  • Law 1: A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
  • Law 2: A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
  • Law 3: A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.