Absolutely, I know. More than you might be aware of. I don’t think we disagree here.enroe wrote: Fri May 01, 2026 8:42 am
You do know that tech giants like Meta, Google, Apple, and
others will be optimizing their "business model" through AI, right?
I'm sure you discuss this in your academic circles as well? But
that's beside the point.
As for your other argument: I appreciate your impetus of saving human expression. I understand you make an absolute statement on purpose here.
I still disagree, and I doubt that such absolute statements are helpful. Similarly, Spotify introducing badges for „human made“ songs or Bandcamp claiming to just accept human made songs is just virtue signaling, as they must know they cannot control or really check it, and as they have no clear cut definition of what „AI use“ actually means - we had several examples in this thread where we agreed AI is a production tool, an assistant, and not involved in the creative process. So I still would insist that a much clearer definition of where it has been applied in the process, and what for, would be needed to define acceptable or non-acceptable use.
Just one example: so you wrote song, completely human, traditional recording. Somebody feeds it to Suno, makes a cover that sticks 100% to your original composition, but uses a professional sounding voice. Does this make you, the original composer, a non-musician? If we follow your argument: yes, maybe, as AI was involved (even if it’s retrospectively)? Or can we agree that the composition is human, and just parts of the performance AI generated on the basis of a human performance?
(Anyway, I assume I cannot convince you, as you seem to insist on your initial statement - but I appreciate the exchange of thoughts.
