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I’m sad this is the outcome. “Her” was a spectacular and novel exploration of how intelligence fundamentally drives us towards curiosity & connection. It also has a stunningly unusual ending given the topic, where the human protagonist grows in their humanity instead of getting lost in a digital simulation of it.

Johansson is a tremendous artist & entrepreneur, her decision is probably the most reasonable one at this point in AI’s development. Given the apocalypse AI will likely cause to the business model of the creative industry, any AAA celebrity probably needs to avoid being the “identity of AI.”

OpenAI’s and Sam’s enthusiasm for the idea makes a ton of sense. If you’re a tech optimist and haven’t seen “Her,” it’s worth the watch.



>Given the apocalypse AI will likely cause to the business model of the creative industry

We're three years into AI being "capable" of creating more or less realistic looking images, pieces of art, text content and now also video, and I still see no apocalypse. Creatives haven't lost their jobs, many writers I know haven't lost theirs either and both photographers and other visual artists continue to work, sell and hold expositions. At least in the otherwise largely unrelated worlds of fine art appreciation and commercial content creation, it seems that few people take AI sludge seriously so far or trust it much do do anything important, especially now that the initial hype bled down and revealed a lot of tepid flaws.

On the other hand, for industries where visual designers were used to create quick commercial graphics, possibly yes. Many business owners and marketers do use AI there as far as I can see, because they only need a quick picture and don't care much about other details.

Also, don't know the deeper details of her conflict with OpenAI, but good for Johansson for publicly slapping this generally shitty, grossly hypocritical company down a notch. OpenAI as a business needs plenty of that.


It seems you think three years should be long enough for you see the apocalypse. Why is that enough time, do you think? How long was the web around before it caught fire and changed everything?




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