27 votes

A Spanish agency became so sick of models and influencers that they created their own with AI — and she’s raking in up to $11,000 a month

14 comments

  1. [2]
    vord
    Link
    Time to mandate prominant content warnings:

    Time to mandate prominant content warnings:

    This is not an actual person, this is a simulated person created for the sole purpose of injecting advertisements into your life.

    Advertisements are known to cause irrational changes in behavior. Eliminating your exposure to advertising increases the chances the decisions you make are your own.

    42 votes
    1. parsley
      Link Parent
      ... So like actors? This one just takes different professionals to produce.

      This is not an actual person, this is a simulated person created for the sole purpose of injecting advertisements into your life.

      ... So like actors?

      This one just takes different professionals to produce.

      25 votes
  2. [2]
    Minty
    Link
    Inevitable logical conclusion of the whole concept of "influencers": why fabricate a life of a real person when you can fabricate a life of a fake person?

    Inevitable logical conclusion of the whole concept of "influencers": why fabricate a life of a real person when you can fabricate a life of a fake person?

    29 votes
    1. Fiachra
      Link Parent
      It kind of exemplifies the niche I see generative AI filling - creative industries that have been so oversaturated and corporatised that they already lack any human warmth. AI is only able to...

      It kind of exemplifies the niche I see generative AI filling - creative industries that have been so oversaturated and corporatised that they already lack any human warmth. AI is only able to replace human art in places where we turned art into a soulless mass-produced product.

      11 votes
  3. [3]
    shrike
    Link
    This is really fascinating to me. Actual people have started using increasingly good "AI" filters on social media so much that people have been desensitised into seeing no pores or other signs of...

    This is really fascinating to me.

    Actual people have started using increasingly good "AI" filters on social media so much that people have been desensitised into seeing no pores or other signs of actual human flaws. This is done to a degree where some people are actually dropping (regressing?) into the Uncanny Valley from the right side.

    Now we have 100% CGI creations coming from the left side and mixing with the actual humans in the Valley and the overlap is not insignificant.

    Looking at the comments on Instagram on some of these fully CGI "influencers" it looks like some people actually don't know that they're looking at a computer generated image.

    And all this tech is in its infancy and progressing at a crazy pace, if I was a random mid-tier influencer I would be pretty worried for my future. A fully artificial influencer can't get into any drama off-screen, won't have any problematic opinions, doesn't want a raise or renegotiate their contract.

    19 votes
    1. vord
      Link Parent
      I mean, the prime motivator is that they didn't want to pay a person, but with all the benefit. Namely they want the advertiser to seem more than just an advertiser. I personally despise the...

      I mean, the prime motivator is that they didn't want to pay a person, but with all the benefit. Namely they want the advertiser to seem more than just an advertiser.

      I personally despise the entire business model that enables influencers, so in this particular case, I can't wait for the economic benefit for people to collapse.

      Living Billboard would be a much more apt term than Influencer. I have more respect for people tattooing corporate logos on their body.

      13 votes
    2. Fiachra
      Link Parent
      (this is unrelated to my main point but some degree of drama seems to benefit influencers unless handled very poorly, so I predict AI influencers will start faking brand-safe kinds of drama in the...

      (this is unrelated to my main point but some degree of drama seems to benefit influencers unless handled very poorly, so I predict AI influencers will start faking brand-safe kinds of drama in the near future)

      It really is interesting how consumerist culture has sort of paved the way for AI in the way you're describing. I predict the inevitable next step afther the AI boom will be such an oversaturation of AI-generated content that modern culture rebounds hard to the perceived opposite, whatever that may be. Maybe rejection of social media or embrace of live performances, who knows.

      3 votes
  4. [2]
    Grzmot
    Link
    It's just Hatsune Miku all over again lol.

    It's just Hatsune Miku all over again lol.

    13 votes
    1. Trobador
      Link Parent
      Not quite the same, since Miku is just a mascot to a voicebank... at least initially.

      Not quite the same, since Miku is just a mascot to a voicebank... at least initially.

      6 votes
  5. [2]
    flalwess
    Link

    What do you do when you can’t stand the people you rely on to make a profit? For one company, artificial intelligence has proven to be the lucrative answer.

    Aitana, a 25-year-old woman from Barcelona, is described by her creators as the first Spanish AI model, Euronews first reported.

    But influencer agency The Clueless was only inspired to design her because they found real-life models and influencers too unreliable and difficult to work with.

    “We did it so that we could make a better living and not be dependent on other people who have egos, who have manias, or who just want to make a lot of money by posing,” The Clueless founder Rubén Cruz told Euronews.

    Diana Núñez, co-founder of The Clueless, told Fortune in an email that the pair were mainly taken aback by the “skyrocketing costs” of those influencers.

    “That got us thinking, ‘What if we just create our own influencer?’ And, well, the rest is history—we unintentionally created a monster. A beautiful one, though.

    “It took us a few months of experimenting and trying out different looks until we finally hit the jackpot with the Aitana you see today.”

    Aitana has 122,000 followers on Instagram, where her profile states she is a digital creator. An update on her story feed even shows a real-life breakfast bowl, as her creators seek to give her the illusion of a life.

    “Even after the media revealed she was an AI creation, many followers still expressed their love for her. The key lies in crafting a relatable personality so that her followers feel a genuine connection,” Núñez said.

    It has proved a highly lucrative venture for the company, with Cruz telling Euronews that Aitana brings in an average of €3,000 ($3,300) a month, but on one occasion took in €10,000 ($10,900). Núñez told Fortune that most of this money comes from social media ads, and Aitana has also signed on to become an ambassador for a sports supplement brand.

    The investment in creating a personality and “life” for Aitana has also proved to be quite convincing. Cruz claims that an unnamed famous Latin actor even called the agency the ask her on a date.

    While Cruz was displeased with real-life models, Núñez doesn’t envisage AI alternatives taking their place. Still, she doesn’t see many limits to what Aitana could one day offer.

    “Imagine talking with Aitana at home through virtual reality glasses. We’re even open to the idea of each Aitana follower having a personalized experience, all with respect and with the same affection we give her as if she were a real person,” she said.

    AI girlfriends

    While she may be the first of her kind in Spain, Aitana is by no means an anomaly.

    AI companies have been spying opportunities in marketing fake models to consumers and lovesick men, as the computer-generated models become increasingly difficult to tell apart from their human counterparts.

    Lu do Magalu, a Brazilian model generated from 3D AI art, commands 6.6 million followers on social media, while Lil Miquela, labeled as a 23-year-old robot living in LA, has 2.7 million followers.

    Caryn Marjorie, a 23-year-old influencer, explained to Fortune how she created an AI version of herself that served as a virtual girlfriend to 1,000 men. Customers of CarynAI pay $1 per minute of time with the virtual Marjorie, which is described by her owners, Forever Voices, as an “extension of Caryn’s consciousness.”

    But AI models, influencers, and “girlfriends” also embody the debates at the center of the nascent technology, including ethics, labor, and humanity’s ability to control it.

    In a May interview with Business Insider, Marjorie said the bot appeared to have gone rogue and started engaging in sexually explicit conversations with her customers.

    “In today’s world, my generation, Gen Z, has found themselves to be experiencing huge side effects of isolation caused by the pandemic, resulting in many being too afraid and anxious to talk to somebody they are attracted to,” Marjorie told Business Insider.

    “CarynAI is a step in the right direction to allow my fans and supporters to get to know a version of me that will be their closest friend in a safe and encrypted environment.”

    Users have been unable to access CarynAI for the last month after John Meyer, the chief executive of Forever Voices, was arrested on suspicion of arson, 404Media reported.

    4 votes
    1. vord
      Link Parent
      I'm gonna call "bullshit" on this one. There's no way that they genuinely thought they were gonna be able to charge $60/hour to people and not have them use it as jerkoff fodder. That bot began...

      Marjorie said the bot appeared to have gone rogue and started engaging in sexually explicit conversations with her customers.

      I'm gonna call "bullshit" on this one. There's no way that they genuinely thought they were gonna be able to charge $60/hour to people and not have them use it as jerkoff fodder. That bot began engaging in sex stuff the instant they saw their numbers dropping.

      Like, you can get actual humans to do video of sex stuff privately for less than $60/hr.

      13 votes
  6. [2]
    shusaku
    Link
    I don’t understand what the AI part is here. Are they using AI to generate the images? Does AI write responses to comments? Does AI come up with ideas for posts? Maybe the company thinks the hype...

    I don’t understand what the AI part is here. Are they using AI to generate the images? Does AI write responses to comments? Does AI come up with ideas for posts? Maybe the company thinks the hype of AI will help boost the profile of their influencer…

    2 votes
    1. giraffedesigner
      Link Parent
      Aitana doesn't exist, the images of her are all generated by AI.

      Aitana doesn't exist, the images of her are all generated by AI.

      6 votes