Why not? It becomes another form of collaboration and collaboration always works better than doing everything yourself. At the end of the day, you still get to choose what to take from it and what to ignore. The good thing is that, unlike human collaborators, you don't have to worry about offending them if you don't like something they've offered up, you just tell it to try again._leras wrote: Sat Feb 21, 2026 8:15 am(I don't like the idea for music and art though... I'm not interested in it influencing my output, or what I hear)
Maybe, maybe not. I ran into a mate I hadn't seen for a while a few months ago and he couldn't wait to play me the AI generated music he'd made for nothing more than his own listening pleasure. To the best of my knowledge, he'd never had much interest in music previously but he was genuinely excited by this. You can't argue with that. It may devalue music as a commodity, as a product, but it could equally allow anyone to make their own music, for their own amusement, and create a deeper appreciation for music in general. I can't see that as a bad thing.VitaminD wrote: Sat Feb 21, 2026 3:37 pmI think the other part of this is society as a whole will probably devalue music even more... But now we can just type a few lines in an AI prompt and generate something, even if it isn't 1:1 the highest quality.
I only see that as an incremental worsening of a situation we've been dealing with for years already. Being one in a million or one in ten million doesn't seem like much of a difference to me.We are beginning to already become inundated with music, pre AI. Some that might even chart but probably never gets discovered. But now everyone also has to compete for listeners with a sea of AI slop. It's all meshed together.
