this post was submitted on 05 Mar 2025
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I think automation only cares about increasing the output, not about the effort or exclusivity of the input.
Since you propose reviewing history, let's do it together:
...and now neural networks are suddenly the preposterous advance? Nonsense.
Luddite propaganda is corporate propaganda is elitist propaganda, a step back towards less efficient ways of reaping the benefits of labor so it can be more easily controlled and restricted, an elitist approach where artists perform at the whim of someone wealthy enough to be able to afford them.
If you want to discuss the fair compensation for labor, we can start talking about total production, compensation inequality, an UBI system, or whatever. Don't come in blindly claiming that cutting down technological labor amplification, is the only way to get paid enough to live... or that getting paid is even required to live in a post-scarcity world, much less that artificially imposed scarcity is something positive.
voice generators and generative ai are built with the intent of replacing artists, your incredibly reductive "history lesson" funnily illustrates only situations distinct from the current situation and you gloss over making any specific claims about the technology, just broad vagary about the trajectories of technological advancement. I dont think you are equipped to discuss this topic honestly.
??? actually just a plainly absurd statement. this isnt even worth responding to it's so absurdly incorrect.
Yes yes ubi, but "technological labor amplification" in this case is driving human artists out of the market. make specific claims, quit hiding behind vague generalizations about automation. it's a waste of everyone's time and terminates your train of thought before you get to something relevant.
We can discuss further if you make an effort to understand this topic, but so far you are just speaking largely in cliches that arent worth responding to and arent worth your time writing.