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19 votes
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Policy regulation for robot, AI, and AV safety
7 votes -
Obituary: Remembering Doug Lenat (1950–2023) and his quest to capture the world with logic
12 votes -
Google Gemini eats the world – Gemini smashes GPT-4 by 5X, the GPU-poors
9 votes -
NarxCare score may influence who can get or prescribe pain medication
16 votes -
As employers expand artificial intelligence in hiring, few states in the USA have rules
12 votes -
A developer built a 'propaganda machine' using OpenAI tech to highlight the dangers of mass-produced AI disinformation
27 votes -
Should AI be permitted in college classrooms? Four scholars weigh in.
13 votes -
Microsoft patents AI powered backpack, bristling with sensors
7 votes -
Swiss research team builds autonomous drone that beats humans in first-person drone racing
19 votes -
American Stories: A large-scale structured text dataset of historical US newspapers
16 votes -
Google wants an invisible digital watermark to bring transparency to AI art
30 votes -
Gannett stops using AI to write articles for now because they were hilariously terrible
20 votes -
Dangerous AI-generated mushroom foraging books are all over Amazon
36 votes -
Friction, emissions, accident prevention and statistical arguments
5 votes -
Ugly numbers from Microsoft and ChatGPT reveal that AI demand is already shrinking
91 votes -
Sign up to get Cody for free
8 votes -
How Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, Mark Zuckerberg, and Marc Andreessen—four billionaire techno-oligarchs—are creating an alternate, autocratic reality
31 votes -
Ten open challenges/research directions in LLM research
7 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission chair Lina Khan Q&A: Hollywood 'red flags', on her WGA meetings, AI and why the agency's keeping an eye on entertainment
11 votes -
Johnny Cash - Barbie Girl (2023)
35 votes -
How a brain implant and AI gave a woman with paralysis her voice back
15 votes -
Report: Potential New York Times lawsuit could force OpenAI to wipe ChatGPT and start over
75 votes -
As its moderators remain on strike, Stack Overflow introduces "Overflow AI"
48 votes -
Skipping a step: Corridor Digital and AI anime
Almost 6 months ago Corridor Crew released an AI-drawn anime short (ANIME ROCK, PAPER, SCISSORS) with an accomppanying making-of video ( Did We Just Change Animation Forever?). It got... mixed...
Almost 6 months ago Corridor Crew released an AI-drawn anime short (ANIME ROCK, PAPER, SCISSORS) with an accomppanying making-of video ( Did We Just Change Animation Forever?). It got... mixed reception. Some loved the new era of "democratizing animation" (meaning you don't anymore need a team of hundreds of animators which in turn means it's possible for smaller creative teams to make their visions come to life), others really hated it for blatantly just ripping off an existing anime (Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust, 2000) and general disrespect over animation as a job and art form -- or at least that's how (some) animators felt. Having heard them talking about drawing each frame with such a passion (on Corridor's show!), I can understand the ire.
Now, almost half a year later, comes the sequel (ANIME ROCK, PAPER, SCISSORS 2) also with an accomppanying making-of (Did We Just Change Animation Forever... Again?). Things... have changed. Basically Corridor realized that stealing art is bad, so they hired a real artist to draw a model sheet as a base for the AI to draw from (instead of stealing others' work). They also hired a person to write a theme song and a team of online artists to touch up every frame of the anime (watch the making-of if you're interested in the details, they go through them very well).
Next, some personal opinions of mine, starting with the first anime. I liked it. It was a nice and funny short with an interesting, smooth style that comes with the territory when there are more frames crammed into a second. Overall, it was the goofy concept of rock paper scissors combined with the over-the-top life and death drama that was fun. Visual style on the other hand, nowhere near ready. The warping and "worming" between each frame were really distracting and it wasn't ready for more than a tech demo (or for some relatively out-there story where that stuff ties into the film, not as a distraction). But I was able to look past those problems because it was a pretty good video.
Most of all, I didn't like them using artists' work without permission (and not saying anything about it).
Now to the sequel. It's... basically same? Same problems, less warping but for example king's crown was changing its color like it was having some sort of multistage chemical burn, and the visual style wasn't as strong and at times more clunky than on the first one. Maybe that's due the fact that the AI style guidebook was a lot smaller or that they were only willing to spent X amount of hours and money working on this while aiming for the anime episode lenght -- I don't know. But the story and the writing were still the best parts. Interestingly also I think direction was a bit weaker and they used too many "cool moment" tricks which made it visually messy. It basically got in the way of the story.
(Also I really dislike that Niko still wasn't taking responsibility for stealing art from others, bit of a bummer since most of us knew better six months ago already.)
What they proved with the second anime is that AI is still not close to replacing actual artists and it's a lot of work to make them even this way -- even if the AI part worked smoothly! But most of all what matters is the content, the creativity and how it's translated to the screen. Not the AI. It's a tool, not a revolution.
Edit. For clarity and some additional thoughts.
28 votes -
Language is a poor heuristic for intelligence
37 votes -
Using artificial intelligence to ban books only makes the problem worse
20 votes -
ChatGPT's odds of getting code questions correct are worse than a coin flip
64 votes -
Evennia 2.20 released now with AI support
16 votes -
AI is ruining the Internet
88 votes -
The writers’ strike over AI is bigger than Hollywood
65 votes -
AI comes for YouTube’s thumbnail industry
26 votes -
Artificial intelligence and internet of things for sustainable farming and smart agriculture
6 votes -
Meta is releasing AudioCraft: Generative AI for audio made simple and available to all
34 votes -
Analysis of self driving vehicle experience and suggestions re LLMs and other AI
10 votes -
Get the lowdown on 'e/acc' — Silicon Valley's favorite obscure theory about progress at all costs, which has been embraced by Marc Andreessen
32 votes -
AI has helped radiologists detect 20% more cases of breast cancer during screenings, new Swedish study finds
25 votes -
Artificial intelligence versus human-controlled doctor in virtual reality simulation for sepsis team training: Randomized controlled study
10 votes -
Megathread #12 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
Haven't done one of these in a while, but there's a bit of news, so here's another. Here's the previous thread.
36 votes -
A jargon-free explanation of how AI large language models work
40 votes -
OpenAI's Altman launching a cryptocurrency with an eye-scanner gimmick. Does this impact how you feel about AI?
23 votes -
Cryptography may offer a solution to the massive AI-labeling problem
9 votes -
Boffins (CMU) build automated method to bypass LLM guardrails
8 votes -
The problem with ChatGPT is that all of these websites like W3Schools and TutorialsPoint will go bankrupt
ChatGPT got all of its information from these websites, but these websites still use advertising to gain revenue. When a user asks ChatGPT a question, instead of going to the site, it's using the...
ChatGPT got all of its information from these websites, but these websites still use advertising to gain revenue. When a user asks ChatGPT a question, instead of going to the site, it's using the information stored on the site without giving the site any revenue.
That's why they're being sued. (Also why Reddit is doing what it's doing with the API)
What do we do? How can we keep these sites alive, and still make use of ChatGPT? I can write code and solve problems days faster than I used to now, but it seems kind of morally bankrupt of me to use this service which is so clearly putting the foundations it was built on out of business.
41 votes -
Forget subtitles: YouTube’s new feature dubs videos with AI-generated voices
17 votes -
They’re the names you don’t know. Hollywood’s ‘journeyman’ actors explain why they are striking.
13 votes -
A GPT-4 capability forecasting challenge
7 votes -
Windows could become cloud based in the future
16 votes -
SDXL 1.0 announcement
16 votes -
ChatGPT broke the Turing test but can't solve visual logic puzzles
11 votes