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Caroline's avatar
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I definitely need to dive into this deeper but the thing that stuck out to me the most on a cursory reading was talking about having someone create something from an idea of yours - that causes creativity to require an economic transaction. But most of these AI tools are paid, and their use enriches unethical people - there's still an economic transaction between the user and the creative product. I'd like to see that essay writer weigh in on what makes an economic transaction to access AI different from an economic transaction to pay another creative to assist with the realization of an idea.

I'd also love to hear others' thoughts about weighing the idea of putting money directly into the pockets of people who scraped the Internet for uncompensated training material, if that's a fair price to pay for "enriching" one's life - at what point are we making our own lives easier at the expense of others in a way that doesn't outway the cost? If we can survive without AI, why would we choose to add a tool that provides ease at the expense of others when we survived without it previously all our lives?

Ultimately I think it would be better to build an ethical society that gives people freedom to pursue creative interests in ways that accommodate the way their brains work than slap a band-aid on the way things are now by creating dubiously ethical tools that may help some people, but that's my own conclusion.

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