How AI will improve human art and writing
Don't panic. It's likely that AI is the best thing that ever happened to human-generated content.
Panic is in the air.
San Francisco-based Open AI made cutting-edge generative AI accessible to the public. The public tried it and realized that publishable posts, articles, essays and novels can be created by AI in seconds. AI, as an “artist,” can churn out award-winning “art” in vast quantities.
CNET Money has published dozens of news articles written substantially by ChatGPT, and nobody noticed until the fact was reported. Bloggers and marketers are actively using ChatGPT to generate content. This is only the beginning. Within months, AI-generated written content will be everywhere. And in just a couple of years, the vast majority of online content is likely to be synthetic media — content generated in part or in full by AI.
And that’s why people are panicking.
The existence of these tools represents the “collapse of the creative process” and even the “end of writing,” according to some.
“Teachers are worried” and have been warned to expect a “flood of cheating.” The New York Education Department blocked ChatGPT on all school networks.
The future looks grim for human artists and writers. Or does it?
We’ve been here before
In 1826, Joseph Nicéphore Niépce took the world’s first photograph. Within 23 years, some 100,000 Parisians were getting their picture taken at least annually. In the 1880s, George Eastman created film in rolls, enabling an eventual mass market in cameras, which turned everyone into a photographer.
Within a few generations, getting one’s picture taken became a banality in the industrialized world— something everyone did.
What really changed was the medium photography largely replaced for portraits — painting.
Before photography, most painting existed to capture people in painted portraits. It also served the purpose of visual storytelling, often religious, and for the equivalent of postcards — painting of landscapes, domestic scenes, still lifes and other somewhat utilitarian visual information capture. Painting served the semi-practical purpose of faithfully and accurately capturing scenes for the purpose of sharing.
Imagine the panic among professional painters in the 19th Century. A new technology emerged that could create a better (more “realistic”) image that took less time and, eventually, anyone could do and that could be easily reproduced — someone could make a thousand photographs from a single picture.
But photography didn’t end painting. Instead, photography improved painting in two ways. First, impressionists and other paintings immediately started using photography (often secretly) to improve their work. They were able to freeze in time fast-moving phenomena, such as ocean waves, and really look at them. They were able to study the nature of light, capture exact proportion and use photographs of human models that would hold perfectly still. The painter’s collaboration with photography improved the goal of faithful, accurate representation and ushered in new photography-enhanced painting styles like realism and naturalism.
Second, it freed painters to explore non-faithful reproduction — to capture human emotions more creatively and explore human visual peculiarities. The birth of impressionism was fundamentally counter-photographic. Outdoor scenes were created by blobs of colors — what we might today call “pixels.” Art Noveau, Cubism, Futurism, Surrealism, Abstract Expressionism and all the rest were inconceivable without the faithful representation load being carried by photography.
In addition to vastly improving the painting arts, photography ushered in a whole new art: Photography itself — an expressive tent big enough for gallery-filling artists and billions of amateurs.
While photography initially looked like an existential threat to painting, it turns out that it was the best thing to ever happen to the medium.
Here’s how AI is likely to affect human expression.
Mike’s List of Brilliantly Bad Ideas
1. This typewriter writes your novel (so you don’t have to!)
The Ghostwriter, conceived by designer Arvind Sanjeev, is a repurposed Brother typewriter that taps into ChatGPT via an installed Arduino. Instead of typing the words directly on the page, you instead type text prompts for ChatGPT, and the AI sends back the words for the Ghostwriter to type on paper.
2. Gadget won’t let you type “LOL” unless you really did laugh out loud
Brian Moore’s LOL Verifier exists to keep you honest. It stops you from typing LOL if it didn’t actually hear you laugh. When you type LOL, it listens. And if it hears you laughing, it types LOL, plus “verified at 2:34pm” or whenever the laugh took place. Now THAT’s funny.
3. Don’t waste water in the shower. Use it to power your electric toothbrush!
A would-be inventor named Dustin Morgan is Kickstarting a shower head attachment that uses the flowing water in your shower as a kind of hydroelectric dam for the generation of power. Water + electricity? What could go wrong?
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