• Rhaedas@fedia.io
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        4 days ago

        Data actually did very good duplication of art and music until Picard suggested he not be so precise but add a unique difference to make things his own. The question is, did Data adjust masterpieces through some random variation, did he tweak certain things to try and improve, or did he mix other artist work in to give a new style? Is any of this slop if a human does it?

        • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          IIRC they have a similar discussion following his violin performance. Data laments that while he gave a perfect performance in regards to technique and musicality, he was simply emulating the old masters. Someone (I think Riker?) points out that Data was the one who chose how to combine those old players’ styles together. By blending those old styles together, he had created his own unique style.

        • shutz@lemmy.ca
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          4 days ago

          One of the points Picard made (with regards to Data’s violin playing) was that, in choosing two reference performers with radically different styles as his basis, he made a creative choice and created something new.

          Unfortunately, we can see how this argument falls apart now in the way that AI slop gets produced.

          • atomicbocks@sh.itjust.works
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            4 days ago

            I disagree;

            Data is sentient and made a conscious choice based on his preferences.

            Modern AI is fed the information it can pull from.

          • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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            3 days ago

            I agree with the other comment that it’s different in the case of Data, probably. He’s actually intelligent, unlike current “AI” that are just statistical models. They aren’t making conscious decisions about what they think would be best. They’re just doing the thing that fits the input the best (with some noise to not be as predictable).

            Data is actually examining a piece and thinking what style could compliment it. It isn’t just statistics, but an active conscious decision. He’s making considerations of why some styles could improve a piece, even though they may not have any statistical relation to each other.

            (This is all under the assumption Data is what he appears to be in the show.)

        • deltapi@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          If ST:PIC season 1 is cannon for you, he painted originals before his destruction on scimitar. So do with that what you will.

        • Zephorah@discuss.online
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          4 days ago

          I think the argument is more the one made by Mordin Solus in regard to the Collectors. Is it art? Is it of culture and ‘humanity’? Or drone machines with all of those elements stripped from their code?

      • marcos@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        Yeah, to be fair he got complaints that he couldn’t compose… and then put the work into learning that…

  • ekZepp@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    We have fiction with Data. A truly artificial living person. Unique in his own.

    Then we have reality. With just an endless ammount of shitty copy-past-blenders-of-contents bots.

    • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      AI today isn’t much closer to Data than it was in the 90s. What we call AIs are mostly just correlation engines of various sizes and foci. Though some of them are decision trees that more or less enumerate every possible series of decisions it can make (up to a point) to try to predict the most optimal one.

  • NotASharkInAManSuit@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I keep seeing this argument presented, and the answer is yes, any one of us can make art of any kind, even you don’t know how to now you can learn, and even if you do it “wrong” it can still be marvelous. Most modern techniques in any form of art were developed by disregarding the established rules of what something is or just fucking it up entirely into something new, two things LLMs and Dispersion are literally incapable of.

    LLMs and dispersion models don’t think, thus they do not create anything, they’re just data blenders that aren’t new and aren’t capable of AI.

  • missandry351@lemmings.world
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    4 days ago

    That burn 😂😂😂 And the fact that Data actually paints stuff, and plays musical instruments (I don’t know if he ever created a music of his own) and wrote poetry of his own (the quality of it is debateble but still he already did more than her)

  • UltraMagnus0001@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Isaac Asimov’s “Three Laws of Robotics” are guidelines for how robots should ideally behave. They are intended to be an inherent part of a robot’s nature, not physical laws. The laws are:

    First Law: A robot cannot harm a human, or allow a human to be harmed through inaction.

    Second Law: A robot must obey human orders, unless they conflict with the First Law.

    Third Law: A robot must protect its own existence, unless it conflicts with the First or Second Law.

  • tjsauce@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    We judge AI by the standard of the most conscious, intelligent, and empathetic amongst humanity, yet AI has surpassed those that lack these qualities

  • Bobo The Great@startrek.website
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    4 days ago

    The irony is that nowadays, something that is universally considered non-human is able to do these things, arguably better than the average human.

    • TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org
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      4 days ago

      Cutting snippets of paragraphs out of existing books and pasting them together into a conglomeration that vaguely resembles a novel does not make me an author. Pattern recognition and matching is not original creation.

      The original source material was still human-generated. When a computer is able to imagine a totally new concept out of thin air, then I will be impressed.

      • Zephorah@discuss.online
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        4 days ago

        I’m no defender of AI, but this is a bad argument. We are neurologically wired to detect patterns. It’s how experience works. Intuition. Differential diagnoses.

        There’s a decent body of research within Cognitive Science on creativity. Ideas don’t burst into existence from nothing, they develop. The statement that everything is derivative speaks from reality, not just angst. Artists themselves hang out together. The French Impressionists. Hemingway and his peers. Their communities are about more than just not being lonely. Oppenheimer anyone? Scientists think tank for a reason.

        Here’s one article to my point: https://pulpfest.com/2022/07/11/influence-or-coincidence-hemingways-fiction-and-hammetts-hardboiled-pulp-2/

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          Yeah, it’s an uncomfortable thing to admit, but we don’t actually know if it’s true that “real” intelligence works fundamentally differently than modern ML techniques. The argument that generative AI isn’t “real” creativity could still turn out to be cope.

      • Frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 days ago

        Name any concept that you think was imagined out of thin air. Talk to the creator, and you will almost certainly get a list of other sources that led to it.

        These sorts of tests are really tricky to figure out. Just what the hell is intelligence and consciousness and creativity, anyway? The most useful thing AI can do is pin down some tests of what they actually mean.

        Though some of the most important work on consciousness is actually coming out of anesthesiology.

      • Azzu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 days ago

        You might argue that humans are just pattern recognition or matching, just with a wider variety of inputs than the typical LLM

      • Bobo The Great@startrek.website
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        4 days ago

        That’s why I said “most humans”. If you take an average person, chances are they are unable to produce a song, if not replicate one they have heard. If that person is a musician, if they make an original song it’s likely similar in concept, execution and technique to other songs they have experienced (because human learning is largely, though not entirely, consumption of previous knowledge and retransformation). Only a minuscule minority of people would be able to produce truly novel music, with rules that are not and have never been used before.

        Does it mean only a person that is exceptional in a field can be considered human and intelligent?

        Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying that LLM learn in the same ways as humans do (even if the principle is similar) and that there is any " intelligence" in what they make. But plenty of people enjoy AI gemerated content, sometimes without noticing (and AI generated songs are the most likely to be unidentified by the average persone in my opinion).

        But the examples picked by the captain are objectively bad arguments to define intelligence and coscence, as we are being clearly demonstrated in these recent years. Current AI models are pretty darn good at transformative art, probably more than the average person, and that ok, just like a car is objectively faster than any person could possibly be, or a robotic arm is infitely more precise.

      • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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        4 days ago

        Not defending AI, but humans also learn from the works of others. So if we want to mimic or recreate our own intelligence it makes sense that it should “learn” from similar material in a similar way.

        One thing that’s not similar is that we take time to learn and grow. And through that growth over time we develop connections between these concepts we have learned from those materials. Plus a bunch of other stuff we do that is kissing from the current state of AI. Yet many people don’t understand that or choose to ignore it.