> There’s already more human produced content in the world than anyone could ever hope to consume, we don’t need more from AI.
Even if you think the harms of AI/machine generated content outweigh the good, this is not a winning argument.
People don’t just consume arbitrary content for the sake of consuming any existing content. That’s rarely the point of it. People look for all kinds of things that don’t exist yet — quite a lot of it referring to things that are only now known or relevant in the given moment or to the given niche audience requesting it. Much of it could likely never exist if it weren’t possible to produce it on demand and which would not be valuable if you had to wait for a human to make it.
Just happened to me yesterday. I realized I'd really like to watch a long-form video on Huygens Clock. Something between a short (god damnit) and Quicksilver. Thought there must be something detailed. Nope, at least Youtube let me down. Or the search algo, who knows. Since they removed the "20+ minutes" button it has become basically useless to search on YT.
They're pushing Shorts so fucking hard it makes me sick.
Even worse is that we're banning TikTok because it's bad for the kids (short form algorithmic content), Snapchat (similar thing + strangers creeping) and Instagram Stories (algorithm again).
BUT there is NO WAY for a parent to allow their kid to use Youtube AND block Shorts. (yes there are browser plugins etc, but how do you enforce them on a child?)
And from what I've seen the AI slop on Shorts is so fucking bad that it seems we just collectively forgot about Elsagate...
The generated content is wasting the time of maintainers. How would you solve that?
For your winning argument, what would you use to prevent slop filling up your feed when there is more AI generated content, any sort of protocol that you have?
Even if you think the harms of AI/machine generated content outweigh the good, this is not a winning argument.
People don’t just consume arbitrary content for the sake of consuming any existing content. That’s rarely the point of it. People look for all kinds of things that don’t exist yet — quite a lot of it referring to things that are only now known or relevant in the given moment or to the given niche audience requesting it. Much of it could likely never exist if it weren’t possible to produce it on demand and which would not be valuable if you had to wait for a human to make it.