General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsYouTube Will Add an AI Slop Button Thanks to Google's Veo 3 (James Pero, Gizmodo, June 21)
Missed this over the weekend, so it's too late for LBN or I'd be posting it there.
https://gizmodo.com/youtube-will-add-an-ai-slop-button-thanks-to-googles-veo-3-2000618126
Mohan, like many executives in tech and otherwise, is decidedly very excited about the potential for AI to shake up the game. Heres what he said during his keynote, per the Hollywood Reporter. Communities will continue to surprise us with the power of their collective fandom. And cutting-edge AI technology will push the limits of human creativity. My biggest bet is that YouTube will continue to be the stage where it all happens. Where anyone with a story to share can turn their dream into a career and anyone with a voice can bring people together and change the world.
Sure, thats one possibility, I guess. The other possibility? A new and heaping mountain of junk content that neither enriches your general selection of YouTube fodder nor protects the already embattled line between reality and fiction. I hate to be the resident slippery slope guy, but how far are we really going to take this? According to Mohan, pretty freakin far. The possibilities with AI are limitless, Mohan said during the keynote. A lot can change in a generation. Entertainment itself has changed more in the last two decades than any other time in history. Creators led this revolution.
Its a little ironic to extol the creator-led content revolution on one hand and introduce a watershed tool that helps vacuum up all of their content and regurgitate it into AI slop on the other, but hey, whos counting? Oh, thats right, Hollywood is. As noted by the Hollywood Reporter, YouTube has already struck a deal with the Creative Artists Agency (CAA) that gives artists and athletes control over their likeness. But thats just some artists who are okay with capitulating to the apparent tsunami of video generation. Hundreds of other actors have already voiced their concerns over the potential for AI to ruin their careers and plunder their intellectual property. As a result, theyve called for regulation on generative AI and its implementation. You may have gathered from the simple fact of my writing these words right now that those cries for a legal framework havent really gone anywhere. They may never, to be honest, which brings me back to YouTubes plans for a future AI slop faucet.
-snip-
This will be another flood of AI slop on top of what's already flooding YouTube, which I posted an April 3 video about just this morning: https://www.democraticunderground.com/100220425309
YouTube hasn't quite reached the point where you'll be required to post an AI slop video for them before you're allowed to view any of their videos, but they seem to be headed that way.

Laffy Kat
(16,697 posts)And I thought, YES!, but alas, the opposite. I would even consider paying extra for an AI Stop feature.
Initech
(105,380 posts)We went way too fast on AI.
highplainsdem
(56,858 posts)highplainsdem
(56,858 posts)Xavier Breath
(5,757 posts)It was my introduction to the term/concept, though I was well aware of its existence, of course. The fact that it can invade and then overwhelm something as innocuous as garden photography, as Mr. Oliver illustrated, is downright frightening.
SheltieLover
(70,455 posts)
highplainsdem
(56,858 posts)Justice matters.
(8,497 posts)to fill their own pockets even more than they already have!
FemDemERA
(519 posts)Because that is one I would like. I was never a huge user of YouTube and dont even have an account, but I find myself going there less and less.
appmanga
(1,189 posts)"glurge" (so many new definitions to learn: https://www.snopes.com/category/glurge-gallery/) sites this is like going to lead to more public figures copyrighting their names and likenesses as a defense to being used in AI slop so, as usual, the guys with the real potential to get rich are the lawyers.