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A picture of a skinny female orc with the side of her head shaved. She wears an armless red dress and a black shawl, as well as matching red bracelets and a black choker with a gold heart at the front.

At the top of the image is the text “You may not like it, but this is what” in large bubble font

At the bottom of the image is a screenshot from the new D&D changelog, reading “• Orcs no longer have the Powerful Build feature.”

And below that, the text “Peak 2024 D&D orc performance looks like” continues the bubble font from the top.

  • Kedly@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    How the fuck is directly stealing art from an artist more fair use than making an entirely new piece of artwork that was trained off of (MANY) other artwork(s) if both arent being used for profit?

    • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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      5 months ago

      If you take a picture of my painting, idgaf. If you sell those pictures as your work and don’t even credit me, we’ve got a problem.

      Your failure to grasp such simple ethics is astounding.

      • Kedly@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        You are assuming the vast majority of AI works are made for sale, they arent. One artists contribution to any AI work is miniscule. A picture grabbed off pinterest is 100% that singular artists work who NEVER got asked if they were ok with someone using that image since it probably wasnt even the artist that put it on Pinterest.

        You’re a hypocrite that just doesnt like AI because the internet told you not to. Pinterest is 300x more closer to theft than AI Art is.

          • Kedly@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            If someone goes into an art museum and gets inspired by an Emily Carr painting so much that they go home and paint their own back yard in her style, if they dont think to credit her when they show their friends their painting, is that stealing from Emily Carr? Howabout if they were instead inspired by the entire museum, and used bits amd pieces of art styles from so many different art pieces to the point they dont know which parts of their own painting to credit to which artist? Is that more theft than the Emily Carr example? Or Less?

            • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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              4 months ago

              If a person goes into an art museum, samples 1000 Emily Carr paintings, and makes an automated Emily Carr painting generator to sell en masse without her permission and without giving them any credit, then that person owes Emily Carr a lot of fucking money.

              Your attempts to reduce or boil down an already simple issue is telling of your intentions.

              • Kedly@lemm.ee
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                4 months ago

                Lmao my intentions are you call out your braindead hypocrisy, and man are you doing some gymnastics to get around that. It’s telling on your end with how you keep bringing up money though that you think the only reason to make art is to make money. I’m bored now though, so enjoy the block list