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  • Where do we draw the line with AI?

  • Because this looks like any girl on social media with a huge following.

  • But this is actually AI generated, as apparently they took an actual girl and edited it into someone different.

  • But the most insane part is, this wasn't the only alternate version of her, as AI artists are spawning hundreds of different people.

  • As the actual girl apparently is very popular online, where her Instagram does have links to her exclusive online content.

  • But now there's also fake accounts using the alternate AI version of her, also having huge amounts of followers.

  • Where they interact with fans that actually think they're talking to a real person.

  • While other accounts actually interact with their fans as if they actually were that AI generated girl.

  • And this was always eventually going to happen, as careers in... corn.

  • Continuously create crazy stories of conventionally successful women becoming astronomically wealthy online.

  • Leaving their jobs as nurses to make $200,000 a month.

  • Leaving their job as a teacher to make over 7 figures.

  • Leaving a law firm to make her former annual salary in one month.

  • And even tales of... helicopter ambulance workers turning to adult content.

  • So it was only a matter of time before the tech bros started to get in on it.

  • Where previously it was just digital marketers using AI to drive traffic to the models for a commission.

  • But why make 10% of her content, when they can make 100% of her content?

  • So I'm a bit in the air about this whole situation.

  • On one hand I think it's dumb for these AI artists to create new women online for social media.

  • Just to bait sad men into thinking they're actually forming a relationship with these non-existent girls.

  • But on the other hand, is this pseudo-relationship any different than the original adult content creator?

  • Because yes, it's pretty messed up to take a girl's video online and edit it so it's a more attractive, marketable product.

  • I can only imagine if someone took all my videos, defaked me into some busty blonde, then suddenly I found out that decoymoist hit 1 million subscribers in only a few months.

  • I'd be upset, but also kind of respected.

  • But what I don't get is some of these AI accounts only slightly edit the original video.

  • Can make their account openly state that this is AI content, but people still reply to their videos as if they're actually talking to an actual girl.

  • But again, is it any different than regular thirsty comments?

  • Which is why I wonder, do these men, consumers of this custom adult content, realize that their interaction is never going to go beyond the screen?

  • So think, why not pay for the next level of custom content, and just get some tech dude to Mr. Potato Head together anything that they want to see?

  • But here's where it gets strange, as we're now seeing robot... strippers.

  • Which is getting us eerily close to the 2014 film, Ex Machina, that addressed the issue of creating custom robot... female companions.

  • Or what we saw in the 2017 film, Blade Runner, where lonely humans bond with...

  • AI companions.

  • And yes, these robot women do look ridiculous today.

  • But how fast did we go from, this looks so realistic, to AI drawing girls with Cthulhu-like hands 6 months ago, to basically undetectable levels today?

  • I don't think it would be too farfetched to think that technology will continue its exponential growth where Ex Machina-like AI chatbots can burst that online thought bubble entirely.

  • And no disrespect to people making money online, as I do it too, but I just don't have much actual exposure to girls that create adult content online.

  • But from what I have seen of them on the whatever podcast, I just don't know if they'll be able to avoid the AI thoughtpocalypse.

  • Because if they stop creating content online for AI to scrape, they cease to make money too.

  • Sure, they could try to go after the digital artists legally, but it would be quite difficult to successfully sue somebody making these from India or China where the same laws don't apply.

  • They can switch themselves off digital platforms, but then they no longer have the ability to gain thousands of customers that's turning these girls into millionaires.

  • Not to mention the idea that robots are getting increasingly more advanced, as Russia's humanoid bots are starting to look somewhat realistic.

  • The UK's bots are actually beginning to play soccer, and China's bots have that just a chipotle posture down to 100% accuracy.

  • And here is where I lay out the actual problem that this presents for society as a whole.

  • As AI is going to take human jobs, but at this juncture, we just don't quite know which ones yet.

  • As people are fighting AI taxi drivers in San Francisco by placing traffic cones on them.

  • Disabling them for entire city blocks.

  • AI delivery bots are seen all throughout Los Angeles.

  • But people are now robbing them like robo pinatas, and just mistreating them in general.

  • They steal your food too.

  • And it's only a matter of time before they summon their security bot big bro that have been known to run over human babies.

  • Meanwhile, we know that algorithms have previously written premises for TV shows, and as Hollywood strikes, Netflix is hiring people to manage AI products.

  • ChatGPT can code so well that it can get a high-paying programming job at Google, and MidJourney can even crank out amazing 3D character art in seconds.

  • Now obviously a bit more goes into any of these jobs, but remember, ChatGPT came out this year, MidJourney came out just a bit before that, and they're already snatching jobs.

  • Case in point, I wanted to make a Samurai Shogun Otani shirt for myself.

  • I'm far from an artist, but it took me about 20 minutes to make this.

  • I'm also writing that book, If Thieves Take Then Blam, by Professor Fafo.

  • And all of these things would normally require me going online to hire a specialist to write, illustrate, or design any of this stuff.

  • But AI, even in its infancy, has eliminated an entire production studio and made it possible for one Neanderthal with a YouTube channel to do it all himself.

  • And in the world of AI replacing human labor, if humans can only stop them from doing menial jobs like driving taxis or delivering food, I can imagine no greater nightmare than the dystopian future where AI gets all the high-paying occupations like computer programming, creating art, or even providing adult entertainment.

  • And the only jobs left for humans is delivering stuff.

  • Although I do understand whether it's my Shogun Shouhei painting or my parody book on Finding Out, this is subpar to what actual artists can do.

  • But keep in mind that in the last few months, AI algorithms have been making us progressively stupider and consistently predicting the end of humanity in the next few years.

  • So if you appreciate my concise, lighthearted, human commentary on what people should actually be concerned about, hopefully I've earned your subscription, then go check out the video on what procedurally generated AI chatbots do when they discover that humans are watching them.

Where do we draw the line with AI?

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