美国国税局加密货币税收提案招致 Coinbase 和其他专家的批评
美国国税局的提案长达 300 页,旨在遵守一项原本与加密货币无关的法律。

Author: Anna Zhu
A few days ago, I received access to OpenAI’s text to image generation AI DALL·E. It’s amazing, just like I expected it to be. After playing around with it and having numerous discussions with people about it in the last few days, I have come up with some observations which made me develop a few future visions for the role of AI in art creation process and its relationship with the human artist. My experience with text to image generating AI is limited to DALL·E and other mainstream products, but my concepts can be applied to generative AI as a whole. For reasons of convenience, I will refer to it as AI in this essay.
In most conversations, the first question that popped up was whether or not AI such as DALL·E will make artists obsolete, exposing the existential threat that some people experience when they first encounter something new and unexplored. This essay is an experience based projection with the means of answering this very question.
I will first define the different roles of artists in a sociological context and then make connections to how the economical implications that generative AI bring along could influence the role of the artist, both sociologically and economically. Through this I hope to break down different aspects of the artist role and discuss short-term futures predictions, feasibility, but also long-term consequences of generative AI. I will include notions from to scientific papers and books which you can find the bibliography and reading recommendation section at the end of this essay.
What does an artist do?
The artist is a person who, in the most basic way of explanation, creates art. So in order to properly answer this question, we would have to first answer the question of what art is, which was lastly contested by Marcel Duchamp as a pioneer of the Dada movement. Since this essay is about the relationship of artist and AI, I will reserve this discussion for future articles. Art in this essay is used synonymously with words such as “artwork”, “art object”, “artistic creation” or “artistic product”. Below are some of the key notions of the artist role in our current societal and economic setup.
Surely there are more archetypes of artists then the ones that I am mentioning here in this essay. Interestingly these categories can also be observed as ways in which the artist is compensated in our free market. Before I draw out the economical implications generative AI has, I will analyse which of the above mentioned tasks of artists can already be done better by art creation AIs like DALL·E.
Which tasks does the AI already do better?
When discussing the future of artists in the scenario of increasing accessibility of generative AI, the next step is to analyse whether AI can actually do the things that artists to now, and if they can do it better. I will use the above established artist archetypes and use deduction based on my personal experience with generative AIs but also my professional experience from working in leading roles in the creative industry.
After this analysis, I believe that generative AI have already exceeded human artists in many aspects. With this in mind, the threat that it opposes in our identities as artists and creators is understandable. The questions of economic impact with being made redundant has to be answered by leaders and solved in a sustainable manner. To propose an optimistic outlook for this current lack of solution, I would like to explore the feasibility of generative AI and how the artists and AI could possibly have a productive relationship with each other.
The new role of the artist and the feasibility of AI
Until our lives are completely taken over by AI in the future, the artist, as all other human beings, will continue to exist as part of society and the economy. The AIs are growing in this very moment you are reading this essay. We can agree on that it is powerful and has huge potential. As history showed, with the emergence of new humanly controllable mediums, the relationship to the medium itself changed for all of humanity. New norms and classification will be discussed and art will still be a great way to explore the mediums. Additionally, because our relationship with the new medium changes, we as human change as a consequence of it. Theories discuss the idea that we have already evolved from homo sapiens to homo techno. So how could the closer future role of the artist look like? What would the techno-human artist create? The next part is about what I envision in my dreams, hopes and wishes for the future relationship between AI and humans.
I think the first change will be and can already be seen in human artist as the craftsman. But it will not disappear. The decrease can be traced back to the advancements in generative AIs and their financial feasibilities, that I will detail out below. There are already massive markets existing that value the human nature of craftsmanship as its main priority. Etsy or Masterworks are great examples from the art market that has benefited from technological advancements and globalisation, while keeping the value of manual skills. The part that I see being taken over by AIs will mostly be in the commercial industry. Many artists already make use of better tools like algorithms and automation on their artwork creation. With better tools, the muscle work that the artists has to contribute lessens. The advantages that AI present in terms of imitation and recombination is of no comparison to the human abilities in this area.
As of now, the one thing that AI can’t replace is the purpose of a creation and therefore the artist’s vision of what is worth manifesting through a medium. Giving the combination of elements meaning. The best generator that you could imagine would still need at least a click of a button, a will of creation to execute its function. And here is where I see the artist shifting towards in the near future. Creation and production will be much faster, with the artist as the designer archetype. Imagine a world where we have AI, that can, upon the spoken world, manifest whole universes in virtual reality. In this type of world, the artist has the power to create parallel universes in the virtual space, with its own physics, species and any type of rules that they can think of through their imagination. For the near future, I see that the artists skills will need to shift towards the ability to communicate and collaborate with AIs, the ability to curate and combine and worldbuilding skills. There are already examples made by contemporary artists like markinducil who created this little concept for Instagram with the help of AI. In this context, the focus of the artist is not the creation of their own abstraction and challenges the assumption that art needs to be completely original. The skill of combination, curation and collaboration is of higher importance for this type of artist archetype. Many attempts have been made to recognise patterns in existing artworks, trying to categorise and classify art. The documentary “Everything is a Remix” gives some examples from pop culture. Claire Bishop argues that even though many artists use digital technology for their creation, they hold onto their “fascination with analog media” (5) to the extent of mimicking analogue mediums, instead of creating from scratch with the new technologies. I believe that we have yet to discover the possibilities of digital art with the help of technological advancements, like AI, before we can purposefully use them to create art from scratch. At the moment, we are still learning and even developing the very tools for future creations. Similar to classical artists like Picasso, who had first learned how to photo realistically translate what he saw with his eyes into a painting, before breaking free from the previously learned boundaries, producing his most well-known abstract paintings. This ties into the another hypothesis that Bishop raises about the role of the individual participation of collection and archiving as a consequence of digitalisation. She claims that with the widespread adaptation of technology usage, every person can combine mediums like film, audio and text, participating in a new form of interactive spectatorship and communication. I would even go a step further and state that this collective act of creative archiving, as a form of historical and social documentation, is merely a necessity to prepare for what will be the next step of art: parallel universe storytelling.
Okay, let’s come down again. Big visions need realistic check ups. When talking about feasibility of AI in comparison to artists as we know them, there are two other factors that play an important role: accessibility and financial models.
Let’s start with the financial models. As of now I have come across three different types. The first one is the payed model, for example the one that Snowpixel uses. The pricing is simple: $10 for 10 credits (100 generated images). If we allow the quality of the image generator to improve over time (which will be inevitable as the AI continues to learn), while the price stays the same, paying 10 cents for generating an artwork through text prompt seems pretty reasonable, since it would take a human artist potentially hours of work to produce the same art through manual labour and craftsmanship. The rendering with Snowpixel takes up to a couple of hours, but because you can submit multiple prompts simultaneously, the user can win back the time through a functioning resource strategy. While I was using DALL·E to create an artwork for the DAO that I am working for, I came across the situation of completely scraping one artwork, because it only took a small amount of time to produce with the help of AI. The speed and mass of art generating AI is out of this world, and its possibility to create infinite combinations, would make the creation of a suitable artwork more resource efficient. Of course the price still has to adjust in the still very young market, but the already existing examples don’t render the impression that services like text to image generation will be an exclusive luxury good. The second financial model is open source and free for everyone to use. Like other open source software, there are many attempts to make free usable text to image generators, for example through the Disco Diffusion Google Colab. Here also, there is also still room for the AI to learn, but its abilities are already impressive. The third model that I could see is a mix of the paid and free to use possibilities. DALL·E for example is funded by OpenAI, which is an artificial intelligence research laboratory consisting of the for-profit corporation OpenAI LP and its parent company, the non-profit OpenAI Inc. Free to use mini versions of like DALL·E mini by Hugging Face already exist. This mixed model could allow each account a certain amount of free generations per time period. With industry and, I would dare to say, societal changing open-source software like Blender as role models, the attempts to make a powerful AI available free for everyone to use are already in the making. OpenAI explained to the artists that were granted access to DALL·E with the limitation of 50 prompts à 6 generations per 24 hours. In the introduction event they have said that there is no plans to remove this access in the future. Of course a text to image generative AI does not compare to the computing power to create virtual universes, but it definitely can change many artists lives, and help them to be much more efficient in their art creation process.
When analysing the accessibility of AI, the computation of the image generation is device independent and can be used through any screen based device with a browser. This accessibility is partly due to a shift to convergence culture, in which less and less devices are needed to be an existing entity in the creation and consumption of art. It allows new ways of artistic collaboration that we didn’t imagine before. If we are capable of implementing AI and automation into other areas of our life, we are looking forward to a bright future, in which humans can take a step back from manual labour and utilise our brains to design, create and procreate. However, we have to solve the problem of energy creation, since AI require power and the digital world for existence.
The future relationship of artists and AI
I hope with this essay I was able to capture my bright outlook for the relationship between artists and AI. One of the greatest strength of humanity is the ability to collaborate and co-create. Another one of the greatest strength of humanity is adaptability. We have overcome and built and improved ourselves to the point where we have discussions about artificial intelligence, which can be understood as the ultimate augmentation of our brains. Because art, as something so closely related to the essence of human nature, wants to be considered as exclusive for humans to create, we take a sceptic stance on AI artists. I have explained different notions of artist archetypes and compared them with and through my analysis i conclude that generative AI will definitely be implemented much more in our lives, taking on big chunks of our manual work. I think the artists’ angst of being made redundant by AI should rather be seen as a gift, an opportunity to augment our creations and expand our imaginations. The collaboration with something that will be so much wiser and more powerful than we are, could be just the beginning of art. Whatever the future may bring, I believe and I hope there will be a mutual camaraderie between the human artist and AI.
Bibliography and recommended reading
(1) Langer, S. (1948). Philosophy in a New Key: A Study in the Symbolism of Reason, Rite, and Art. THE NEW AMERICAN LIBRARY.
(2) Kwastek, K. (2013). Aesthetics of Interaction in Digital Art. © 2013 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
(3) Heylighen, F., Cilliers, P., Gershenson C. (2007). Complexity and Philosophy. In Bogg, J. and R. Geyer (eds.) Complexity, Science and Society. Radcliffe Publishing, Oxford.
(4) Geng, Y., Du, X. X., Zhao, A. (2017). New Media Art as Expressive Language — Artistic Abstraction, Illusion, Emotion. 2017 4th International Conference on Social Science (ICSS 2017). Pages 257–261.
(5) Bishop, C. (2012). Whatever Happened to Digital Art? Artforum, September issue. Pages 434–442.
Benjamin, W. (1969). The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction. In Illuminations, ed. Hannah Arendt, New York: Schochen Books.
Jenkins, H. (2006). Convergence Culture — Where Old and New Media Collide. © 2006 by New York University.
Kwastek, K. (2013). Aesthetics of Interaction in Digital Art. © 2013 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Manovich, L. (2001). The Language of New Media. First MIT paperback edition 2002, © 2001 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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