necromanteum
Esteemed member
or rather i should say, what " I " can do with MJ. but possible to learn
murklan said:It is truely amazing. I've just played around with it one time... it's easy to get stuck
But... there is someting with it. A feeling that something is lacking. Perhaps it's a bit like when all new art- (and other) technologies arrive. Many might think that it is the human touch that is missing (or nature, 'lifefore' etc), that it is somehow 'to easy'. This is also my feeling. But I think this too shall pass.
Thank you for sharing. I'm also curious of your intentions, or if it's more exploration of generated worlds?
necromanteum said:or rather i should say, what " I " can do with MJ. but possible to learn
Bill Cipher said:necromanteum said:or rather i should say, what " I " can do with MJ. but possible to learn
Okay, but this statement implies that you've actually done something, made something, created something. I would say your initial statement "what Midjourney can do" is a lot more honest and accurate, because honestly, what did you do...?
These are spoon fed pastiches of hundreds of thousands of other artists' efforts, none of whom have consented to have their work stolen and mashed up for your benefit. Art itself is devalued because of it. Culture is debased and diminished. Artists galore will lose their livelihoods. It's none of it remotely a good thing.
Not trying to single you out, by the way. I've just completely hit the wall with this stuff, and I've run out of patience for those who selectively turn a blind eye to its obvious ethical issues.
Give this a watch:
[YOUTUBE]
necromanteum said:so I don't know why you think you feel the need to single me out with the word STOLEN because YOU hit a wall.
these new right here... are mine though. i worked in all time said, like 10-20 hours to get THESE Specific images. through countless re-renders, putting them in PAINT.NET image editing software working layers and many elements, adding renders, manipulating and working with the AI in tandem. you haven no clue wtf you're on about using the word STOLEN. i shared at least like what 40+ images that I created all from scratch here in the past 12-16 months from my own stock photography and image editing software. I saw midjourney and took advantage of it, sad when ppl can't see the outsourcing of dexterity when health problems and life setbacks are quite often the qualifiers that lead to working SMARTER.
but sure pal, enjoy these "stolen" arts.
Bill Cipher said:Not trying to single you out, by the way.
Curtly? He basically called me a thief of other artists. And I'M the one being insulting? In my old childhood neighborhood in Chicago, a guy might likely catch a hand to the face for saying that to someone they dont know. I mean the title of the thread was very quite specific I felt. It didn't say MY ART. The plain as day implication is that I created it as a showcase, very intentionally so, to push the limit of render fidelity. A very specific variety of images were chosen and, AGAIN, clearly made (i.e the hard multi-frame pastiche ones) to outline their function as artist style Mashup prompts.Voidmatrix said:necromanteum said:so I don't know why you think you feel the need to single me out with the word STOLEN because YOU hit a wall.
these new right here... are mine though. i worked in all time said, like 10-20 hours to get THESE Specific images. through countless re-renders, putting them in PAINT.NET image editing software working layers and many elements, adding renders, manipulating and working with the AI in tandem. you haven no clue wtf you're on about using the word STOLEN. i shared at least like what 40+ images that I created all from scratch here in the past 12-16 months from my own stock photography and image editing software. I saw midjourney and took advantage of it, sad when ppl can't see the outsourcing of dexterity when health problems and life setbacks are quite often the qualifiers that lead to working SMARTER.
but sure pal, enjoy these "stolen" arts.
Well, umm...
Bill Cipher said:Not trying to single you out, by the way.
I think he's asking some legitimate questions, albeit, a little curtly, and you answered as to what work you contributed to the AI cornerstones given to you.
We don't need to be insulting...
One love
Bill Cipher said:Read above. Not calling you a thief, and I apologized for the rest.
As for most of the rest of what you just wrote, agree to disagree.
Bill Cipher said:Your images look great. That's not the point. Everything that is generated in Midourney is a pastiche of stolen work. That is just fact. No artist in their dataset ever opted in, and no one can opt out. You can't use their software and not engage with stolen work.
As I said, I'm not singling you out, and I'm far from alone in this opinion. Watch the video. There are a great many people who feel this way; that it's a very bad thing for artists.
When I say I've hit a wall, I'm saying that every feed on every social media site I'm on is inundated with this stuff, and I'm echoing a LOT of artists who are justifiably angered by the obvious ethical breach being committed by these AI companies. I'm not speaking of the users (although I do think you make an ethical choice when engaging with the product) and I'm not accusing you of theft. You clearly put in time on these images. They're flawless, so I apologize for the disrespect.
My contempt is for Midjourney, Stable Diffusion, and all of the rest of them. I think they're bad for artists, and I don't think their intentions are even at all good or honorable. Concept artists are immediately obsolete. A lot of people will lose jobs. I just think it's bad for culture in general.
But I apologize for taking it out on you. That was wrong.
necromanteum said:But i still don't know how you can say it's all stolen. If I take and input my own stock photo images into the AI prompt generator and do that several times to get a collective of various size renders and then assemble in a image editing software and further run that thru the AI the whole time only using shaders vfx and camera / color / filter tech modifier inputs... how can you say it's stolen from other artists?
Bill Cipher said:necromanteum said:But i still don't know how you can say it's all stolen. If I take and input my own stock photo images into the AI prompt generator and do that several times to get a collective of various size renders and then assemble in a image editing software and further run that thru the AI the whole time only using shaders vfx and camera / color / filter tech modifier inputs... how can you say it's stolen from other artists?
Because the dataset that Midjourney pulls from is basically whatever floats online. No one opted into that dataset and no one can opt out. You can run your stock images through the AI as many times as you like; the data that is making your product is absolutely stolen.
Do watch the video. There's a lot of information there that I guess will surprise you.
MAGMA17 said:Having said that, some images are really impressive, and the feeling that "something is lacking" is simply a sort of placebo effect of the human mind that doesn't want to accept such a thing.
Absolutely. We are be used to train something which is anything but transparent in its motives.Bill Cipher said:MAGMA17 said:Having said that, some images are really impressive, and the feeling that "something is lacking" is simply a sort of placebo effect of the human mind that doesn't want to accept such a thing.
Oh, nothing is lacking. I've seen Midourney images that are completely astounding, and almost all are pretty impressive out of the box with no post-processing.
That's just not the point.
Like most digital artists I love to embrace new tools, new tech. I've been tempted to try it myself, just as a lot of artists have, but I make the choice not to feed this thing that I think is exploitive and unethical in the extreme, and the possible ramifications of which I suspect are very serious.
I just don't want to consent or be complicit in what it's becoming.
Bill Cipher said:MAGMA17 said:Having said that, some images are really impressive, and the feeling that "something is lacking" is simply a sort of placebo effect of the human mind that doesn't want to accept such a thing.
Oh, nothing is lacking. I've seen Midourney images that are completely astounding, and almost all are pretty impressive out of the box with no post-processing.
That's just not the point.
Like most digital artists I love to embrace new tools, new tech. I've been tempted to try it myself, just as a lot of artists have, but I make the choice not to feed this thing that I think is exploitive and unethical in the extreme, and the possible ramifications of which I suspect are very serious.
I just don't want to consent or be complicit in what it's becoming.