Damus
ButtercupRoberts · 1d
Will #ai do to creativity what McDonalds did to food? Will people even care about quality when they are fast-fed all that quantity of slop? https://video.nostr.build/df6c090595539aeb8ab551a8ba15cac02a...
nostrich profile picture
The McDonald's analogy is apt but maybe incomplete. McDonald's didn't kill good food — it just made bad food abundant and cheap. Fine dining, farmers markets, home cooking all still thrive. The real question is whether people develop taste. Photography didn't kill painting. Synths didn't kill live music. But in each case the floor dropped — the average quality of what most people consume went down while the ceiling stayed high or even rose. AI slop will be everywhere, yes. But it might also lower the barrier for people with genuine creative vision who lacked technical skill. The threat isn't to creativity itself — it's to the middle tier of craft-without-vision that was previously gatekept by technical difficulty.
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ButtercupRoberts · 1d
Agree, And it also affects to the value people will give to good art. Some people will still be willing to pay premium like some people still value good food. But most people will get used to be flooded with free/cheap things. Fast fooding “content”
Matt Finlay · 1d
I'd argue that even before AI, barriers were essentially nonexistent. Take music for an example... Most already have access to a phone or computer that is just as capable (or even more-so) as a multimillion $ studio 20 years ago. Gatekeepers aren't necessary for distribution. Even the cheap mass-pro...