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Artists say companies are already outsourcing entry-level work to generative AI. Artists were among the first to encounter generative AI. "Companies can use generative AI to throw a bunch of stuff at the wall and churn out thousands of concepts in an afternoon." After she first encountered generative AI, Eva used the Have I been Trained tool and found that several of her artworks had been used to train AI models. AMY OSBORNE/Getty ImagesZhao is also concerned about how generative AI may impact the next generation.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Eva Toorenent, she'd, Reid Southen, Reid, Karla Ortiz, It's, Eva, Ben Zhao, I'm, it'll, Ortiz, Midjourney, AMY OSBORNE, Zhao, Glaze Organizations: Service, IBM, BT, University of Chicago, Stability, Getty
SummarySummary Companies Artists' accused companies of misusing works to train AI systemsCompanies said artists failed to identify infringement(Reuters) - Stability AI, Midjourney, and DeviantArt fired back Tuesday at a group of artists who accused them of committing mass copyright infringement by using the artists' work in generative AI systems. The companies asked a San Francisco federal court to dismiss the artists' proposed class action lawsuit, arguing that the AI-created images are not similar to the artists' work and that the lawsuit did not note specific images that were allegedly misused. Representatives for Stability, DeviantArt and the artists did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday. Midjourney's motion said that the lawsuit also does not "identify a single work by any plaintiff" that it "supposedly used as training data." The case is Andersen v. Stability AI Ltd, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, No.
Two separate lawsuits have been launched against AI text-to-image generators. Getty Images also began separate litigation against Stability AI, which is behind Stable Diffusion. On Tuesday, Getty Images filed a lawsuit against Stability AI, the company behind AI art tool Stable Diffusion, alleging it used copyrighted images to train software. The company said in a statement that Stability AI "unlawfully copied and processed millions of images protected by copyright." A representative for Stable Diffusion told Insider that the artists' "allegations represent a misunderstanding about how our technology works and the law."
Social media has been flooded with Lensa AI portraits, from photorealistic paintings to more abstract illustrations. In a lengthy Twitter thread posted Tuesday morning, Prisma addressed concerns of AI art replacing art by actual artists. For some artists, AI models are a creative tool. While the value of art is subjective, the crux of the AI art controversy is the right to privacy. Without decades of examples to learn from, he said, the AI images that looked just like his illustrations would never exist.
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