LLMs and image generation models make it even more difficult for artists and thinkers, who are already in a precarious situation, to make a living from their work. This is not a recent development, as evidenced by the fact that they have been referred to indiscriminately as merely content producers for decades, which gives the loss of value of their important work a telling name even in today’s logic.

This professional group has not received adequate financial recognition for its work, - tbh they never did - but their situation has become way worse since the advent of the World Wide Web.

Still: Today’s technology in the form of so-called AI intensives this problem to an unprecedented degree.

So: Have we reached the end of culture and are we now entering an age of absolute dullness in which there can no longer be a critical spirit, but only amateurish work and industrially mass-produced corporate views? All that however far removed from the craftsmanship that has so significantly shaped the culture of all civilizations throughout the world’s history for so long?

  • DagwoodIII@piefed.social
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    3 days ago

    Sorry to bust your bubble, but most people don’t have a college education. In the USA, the average reading level is below middle school.

    https://www.snopes.com/news/2022/08/02/us-literacy-rate/

    In the UK, about 20% of the population is considered functionally illiterate.

    And even of those who do, how many actually took a philosophy class? And of those who passed, how many have read a philosophy book in the past year?