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Do you have a Sora subscription plan?Hey man I use AI all the time. I'm just trying to predict the future by understanding the present
What's funny is that OpenAI started crying about copyright and accusing DeepSeek of stealing their IP. Copyright for me but not for theeWhatever! Let them all burn. The obvious is going to be known and I think we will find out that many in the world do not respect copyright when it is in the way of something they want. All the money being spent... For what? I just do not see the human race level benefits outside of some medical research areas.
I'm not surprised at all. The whole industry was built this way. If memory serves me, Zuckerberg hacked a student database at Harvard to fill Facebook with its initial dataset. SV companies steal left and right. We've all assumed that they're scraping YouTube for video training data.It was always my [maybe misconceived] understanding that when you're a company that big you don't get to not commit crimes.
I'm not saying anyone committed crimes, I just always assumed because of how the world is, big companies are put in situations where they have to commit many crimes, sometimes frequently, to continue doing business and staying on top.
Are you surprised about any crimes, violations, illegality, in general - or that AI systems specifically may not have been built honestly?
That's a good and frightening question. But I've also heard people say that these massive investments may just be the cost of continuing their monopolies. In other words, they might not be making SkyNet. They might just be trying to hold on to the markets they already have in the face of start-up competition.Not at all. Unhappy, sad are better descriptors that these mega entities are driving our world now. I can only guess that they are planning something a lot larger than realistic fake videos and generative fill to match the amount of investment dollars. The big tech firms have committed to 70, 80, 100 billion dollars a year in AI spending. It just makes me think "what are we in for"?
I did the $200/mo subscription for a month and played with it a lot. I ended up using 1 shot briefly in an edit. It was a video animation of a still photo that I fed into the program. So, the photo was of a storefront on a Manhattan street. Sora added walking pedestrians and passing cars and made the banner wave. Which is very cool. But in the 5-second clip that it generated, a pedestrian appeared out of thin air and 2 pedestrians entered the frame about 1 second apart wearing the identical outfit. Odd. But I only needed 1 second of footage so it worked out.Do you have a Sora subscription plan?
Ouch+1 on the ampersand, and whew for not getting busted! I assumed there would have been a lot of wasted time spent with ask redo's.It was an animation of an ampersand sort of breaking into pieces and flying in different directions across the frame. Not quite what I asked for, but it was kinda cool and something I can't do on my own.
Then the client asked me to change the font of the ampersand. Ouch. Couldn't get the program to replace it for me. Couldn't generate the same type of animation when feeding in the new ampersand image and the same prompt as before. So I had to roto out the old ampersand and roto in the new ampersand into the beginning of the animation. Not perfect, but close enough to keep the shot and not have to admit to my producers that I didn't have control of the technology.
It's also worth noting that the time you spend messing with these things really adds up. Aside from the $200 subscription cost, I must have spent at least a half day of editing trying to get it to give me what I wanted.
I don't want to open a can of worms, but I worked on a promo film that was as close as possible (on purpose) to a huge global brand campaign. It was beyond inspiration, it was striving for a 1:1 match. I think many small production companies "just borrow" from massive campaigns, doing their version, which of course is within the safety net grey area of different cities, different enough edit etc. But there's no inspiration, it's more like thanks for doing the entire creative. I'm opposed to agency gouging if it means the production company suffers, but I'm also against boutique production companies only being able to offer better pricing because they're stealing an overwhelming majority of the mini campaign they're "pitching". It's such a shame too because if it were more frowned upon, we'd see more creative promotional material vs. trying to follow trends as plan A.Of course, that doesn't necessarily mean they're making copyright violations. Even when the websites they scrape specifically state that their content may not be used to train AI, it may be fair game. It depends. The case for fair use is probably something like they're just reading the content and learning from it like a human artist who watches movies and gets inspired and makes something new based on that inspiration.
You mean could we use AI to search for copyright violations elsewhere on the web? In a way that would be great. The truth is I have no idea. Probably? I mean, at least you should be able to feed it a video and tell it to search for possible style/content matches, although it would have a ton of searching to do. I also don't know what constitutes an IP violation. In music copyright cases, the musical influences can be quite vague and still count as a violation. Or it can seem like a clear rip-off and pass muster.I don't want to open a can of worms, but I worked on a promo film that was as close as possible (on purpose) to a huge global brand campaign. It was beyond inspiration, it was striving for a 1:1 match. I think many small production companies "just borrow" from massive campaigns, doing their version, which of course is within the safety net grey area of different cities, different enough edit etc. But there's no inspiration, it's more like thanks for doing the entire creative. I'm opposed to agency gouging if it means the production company suffers, but I'm also against boutique production companies only being able to offer better pricing because they're stealing an overwhelming majority of the mini campaign they're "pitching". It's such a shame too because if it were more frowned upon, we'd see more creative promotional material vs. trying to follow trends as plan A.
In addition to humans policing AI as much as possible in attempt to keep things fair, could we leverage AI to also keep humans more accountable?
Thanks for the link, and wow, diabolical!company that is offering the exact service you describe -- pick a big brand commercial you like, and the AI will copy it shot for shot with a mix of shots you have on hand plus generated material. *supposedly* it can do this or will be able to do this.
I think the issue is worker solidarity. A lot of people were upset when they found out that The Brutalist used generative AI to do dialogue replacement and fix the Romanian pronunciation of the main characters. I didn't really care, especially since it was an arthouse movie with a small budget.Don't care. It's just trying to impress that he used real fakery instead of fake fakery.
It was reported "that 2D artists’ jobs were being replaced by AI at the company.
“A lot of 2D artists were laid off,” one anonymous Activision artist told the site. “Remaining concept artists were then forced to use AI to aid in their work.” Activision employees were allegedly “made” to sign up for AI training, with its use promoted throughout the business."
I'm guessing you are correct that it will not happen, but if it did don't just stop with AI, include CGI. Although it's well know that Tom Cruise performs many of his own incredibly dangerous stunts, I don't remember it ever being a point of disclosure on the movie itself that he did.The main question is will there by some ongoing penalty to pay with audiences if you use generative AI. Will disclaimers like this one become standard and create pressure not to use generative AI.
I'm guessing that that will not happen. But it would be the most significant development that could come from this title card.
Are you joking? The marketing for all of Cruise's movies focuses on the fact that he performs his own stunts. It's part of the draw. Because authenticity is highly desirable.I'm guessing you are correct that it will not happen, but if it did don't just stop with AI, include CGI. Although it's well know that Tom Cruise performs many of his own incredibly dangerous stunts, I don't remember it ever being a point of disclosure on the movie itself that he did.