DALL-E/Every illustration.

Feasting at the Trough of AI Slop

AI imagery is more popular, more powerful, and less harmful than you think

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@sean_7871 11 months ago

I'm not sure you are using the word performative correctly.

Oshyan Greene 11 months ago

"While Meta and X should be concerned about truth, it is so hard to define and enforce that they end up focusing on the much easier and more legible thing—profit. Because the primary usage of these platforms is distraction and entertainment, truth is secondary."

Is *that* the reason they end up focusing on profit - because truth is too hard? I doubt it. If truth were most profitable, they would focus on and favor truth. And doing so is one of the few competitive advantages I can imagine a future new platform using with any chance of success. If a social media platform came out tomorrow that could demonstrate strong capability in detecting, flagging, and actively filtering (or outright rejecting) fake content I would move there pretty quickly.

Instead comments and decisions like those from Zuckerberg, that have already turned the Facebook feed into a stream of mindless crap (instead of the human connections I joined for in the first place) incentivized me to start my own, private social media site. Most people won't have the means, but not everyone has to. This may lead to a fragmented future...

I love how you write!

"Before our tiniest human beings are even fully capable of stringing together sentences, they can form emotional reactions to the content they view. Our lizard brains all like the same thing—and apparently that thing is dirty yellow buses."

"That the subject matter is consistently performative suggests that AI content is a substitutable good in terms of the reactions it elicits from consumers. Additionally, the workflow for these AI creators is identical to that of an employee at any other media company: Make something, distribute it through your favorite channels, get paid, and repeat. The fact that the object was created with AI doesn’t change its position in the feed, only the consumer interest."

On the topic of viewing AI-generated content:

You're not wrong—I’ve caught myself watching, listening to, and viewing AI-generated content. I don't particularly find it off-putting, unless it's done poorly or I feel a bit cheated because it seemed so real. But then again, the same goes for regular content, I suppose.

You make a valid point about traditional media needing to adapt. In a way, the money flows upstream to the platforms that stand to profit from a massive wave of creators who couldn't produce content before the rise of AI.

But on the flip side, with the increase in model capabilities, it's time to make the memes of my dreams!