Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年10月25日
‘Can AI be an artist?’ A Sotheby’s auction tests the answer, while human artists protest AI training
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全球拍卖行苏富比即将举行首次 AI 艺术家创作作品的拍卖会。这件作品名为“AI之神”,由一个名为 Ai-Da 的类人机器人创作,描绘了人工智能先驱艾伦·图灵的肖像。Ai-Da 利用人工智能算法、她眼睛中的摄像头和机械臂创作了这幅画。与大多数由文本转图像模型生成的 AI 艺术不同,Ai-Da 实际上用画笔在画布上绘画。这并非首件由 AI 模型创作并由大型拍卖行拍卖的作品。2018 年,佳士得拍卖了一幅名为“埃德蒙·德·贝拉米肖像”的作品,该作品由 AI 模型生成,并印刷在画布上,最终以 432,500 美元的价格售出,远超最初的估价。但这是苏富比首次拍卖由 AI 模型创作的艺术作品,而类人机器人实际绘画肖像则为 AI 作为艺术家增添了另一层意义。苏富比预计该作品将以 120,000 美元至 180,000 美元的价格售出。

🎨 **AI 艺术家首次亮相拍卖行:**苏富比即将拍卖由 AI 模型创作的艺术作品“AI之神”,这标志着拍卖行业对 AI 艺术的认可。该作品由一个名为 Ai-Da 的类人机器人创作,描绘了人工智能先驱艾伦·图灵的肖像。Ai-Da 利用人工智能算法、她眼睛中的摄像头和机械臂创作了这幅画。与大多数由文本转图像模型生成的 AI 艺术不同,Ai-Da 实际上用画笔在画布上绘画,这为 AI 作为艺术家增添了新的维度。

💰 **AI 艺术的商业化:**苏富比预计“AI之神”将以 120,000 美元至 180,000 美元的价格售出。这表明 AI 艺术已逐渐进入商业领域,并被视为具有投资价值的艺术品。然而,AI 艺术的商业化也引发了争议,一些艺术家担忧 AI 艺术会贬低他们的作品价值。

🚫 **AI 艺术引发的争议:**近年来,AI 生成艺术作品大量涌现,但其版权归属和艺术家身份等问题引发了广泛争议。许多艺术家对 AI 公司使用他们的作品训练模型表示不满,并担心 AI 艺术会取代人类艺术家。近期,超过 15,000 名视觉艺术家、作家、音乐家和其他创意工作者签署了一封公开信,反对将创意作品用于训练 AI 模型。

🕵️ **AI 艺术的伦理问题:**除了版权争议之外,AI 艺术还涉及更深层的伦理问题。例如,一些 AI 艺术作品可能会被用于传播虚假信息或制造矛盾。此外,AI 艺术的快速发展也引发了人们对人工智能未来发展的担忧,例如 AI 是否会取代人类艺术家、AI 是否会拥有自主意识等。

💻 **AI 艺术的应用:**尽管存在争议,AI 艺术在商业领域也展现出巨大潜力。例如,Adobe 和 Canva 等公司已将基于 AI 模型的工具集成到其产品中,并将其作为吸引用户付费升级的重要手段。AI 艺术的应用范围不断扩大,未来可能会在更多领域发挥作用。

📈 **AI 艺术的未来:**AI 艺术的发展方向目前尚不明确,但其商业化趋势不可阻挡。AI 艺术的未来发展将取决于技术进步、法律法规、社会伦理等多方面因素。

🌐 **AI 艺术的全球化:**AI 艺术的发展趋势已经引起全球关注。例如,新加坡已颁布法律禁止使用 AI 技术生成虚假信息进行选举宣传。未来,各国可能会制定更多相关法律法规,以规范 AI 艺术的发展。

⚠️ **AI 艺术的潜在风险:**AI 艺术的快速发展也带来了潜在风险。例如,一些 AI 艺术模型可能会被用于制造虚假信息,甚至用于操控他人。因此,需要加强对 AI 艺术的监管,以确保其健康发展。

💡 **AI 艺术的意义:**AI 艺术的出现,标志着艺术创作形式的革新。它不仅挑战了传统艺术的定义,也引发了人们对人工智能与人类关系的思考。AI 艺术的未来发展将对艺术领域产生深远影响。

🤔 **AI 艺术的反思:**AI 艺术的快速发展,也引发了人们对艺术本质的思考。艺术的价值在于表达情感、传递思想、引发共鸣,而 AI 艺术能否做到这一点?AI 艺术的未来发展方向,将取决于人类对艺术的理解和追求。

🌐 **AI 艺术的全球影响:**AI 艺术的发展趋势已引起全球关注,许多国家和地区正在制定相关法律法规,以规范 AI 艺术的发展。AI 艺术的未来发展,将对全球艺术市场产生深远影响。

Global auction house Sotheby’s is gearing up for its first-ever auction of an artwork created by an “AI artist.”The work—a portrait of AI pioneer Alan Turing titled “AI God”—was created by a humanoid robot using a combination of AI algorithms, cameras in her (the robot presents female) eyes, and a robotic arm. Unlike most AI art that’s generated digitally by text-to-images models, Ai-Da, as the humanoid robot is called, actually painted the canvas as well, according to CBS News.This isn’t the first artwork created by an AI model to go to auction with a major auction house. In 2018, Christie’s auctioned off a work called “Portrait of Edmond de Belamy” that was created by an AI model, printed to canvas, and sold for $432,500, way above initial estimates. But it is a first for Christie’s rival Sotheby’s—and the humanoid robot actually painting the portrait adds another layer to AI acting as an artist. Sotheby’s expects the work to sell for between $120,000 and $180,000.AI-generated art has flooded the internet, and recent shows like Art Basel have included exhibitions that feature AI in some way. The former has amounted to AI slop taking over social media feeds, while these art exhibitions—including the “AI God” painting being auctioned—largely feel like stunts. Still, the Sotheby’s listing represents a major embrace of AI art for the auction house and stance on the debate around if AI can be credited as an artist or inventor at a time when criticism of the concept is heating up—and when software companies are increasingly trying to cash in. Creatives stand up against AI artSince the beginning of the generative AI boom, artists have been launching copyright lawsuits against AI companies, denouncing their work being used to train models, and voicing concerns that AI art will devalue their work. Yesterday, perhaps the largest collective action was taken when more than 15,000 visual artists, writers, musicians and other creatives signed an open letter against using creative works for training AI models.Ed Newton-Rex, the former head of audio at Stability AI who resigned last year over the use of copyrighted content for model training, and who organized the open letter, told The Guardian that artists are “very worried” about the use of the works and impact of AI art. “There are three key resources that generative AI companies need to build AI models: people, compute, and data. They spend vast sums on the first two—sometimes a million dollars per engineer, and up to a billion dollars per model. But they expect to take the third—training data— for free,” he said. Yesterday, a former OpenAI researcher who spent four years at the company and was responsible for gathering and organizing web data to train ChatGPT told the New York Times the company broke copyright laws. He left the company in August because he “no longer wanted to contribute to technologies that he believed would bring society more harm than benefit” and is among the first employees from a major AI company to speak out publicly against the use of copyrighted data to train models.AI art for profit Beyond the model developers, there’s also a slew of companies in the digital image creation and editing space that are using these models to boost their own businesses and profits. Adobe has integrated AI tools based on these models into its programs like Photoshop. Canva, the company trying to disrupt Adobe, has also leaned heavily into AI, partnering with OpenAI and adding new generative AI features throughout its product. Many are included only in the paid subscription, and the company is counting on them to get users to upgrade from its free offering, especially as Canva increasingly goes after business customers. Since art is intended to push boundaries, remark on our world, and make us question, a work like AI-da’s “AI God” is doing exactly what art is about. But as the artists protesting the use of their work to train models know, the experimentation with AI and art doesn’t start or end there. Just as quickly as AI art is headlining Sotheby’s, it’s also being embraced by commercial companies.The role AI will play in art isn’t an easy question. The U.S. patent office earlier this year ruled that AI cannot legally be considered an inventor, and whether or not AI can be considered an artist will continue to be up for debate. Either way, Newton-Rex and the artists pushing back against their work being used to train models have a point. The other pieces of the AI supply chain are worth big money and skyrocketing companies like Nvidia to unprecedented market caps. Why should the data—the works of real people—be available for free, no consent required?And with that, here’s more AI news.Sage Lazzarosage.lazzaro@consultant.fortune.comsagelazzaro.comAI IN THE NEWSSecurity researchers discover thousands of malicious models on Hugging Face. Hackers are setting up fake accounts posing as companies like Meta, SpaceX, and Ericsson to lure downloads of the infected software. For example, one model that claims to be from 23andMe installs malicious code that hunts for AWS credentials in order to steal cloud resources, according to researchers at Protect AI, which found over 3,000 malicious models. HuggingFace said it’s verified the profiles of tech companies since 2022 and scans for unsafe code. You can read more in Forbes.Anthropic releases a new capability for Claude Sonnet 3.5 that enables the model “to use computers the way people do.” Called Computer Use, the API lets Claude perceive what’s on a computer interface, scroll, move a cursor, click buttons, zoom, type, and more to perform actions. It’s a step toward AI virtual assistants that could go off on their own and complete multi-step tasks for users, which Anthropic and other tech companies are all racing to build. The updated version of Claude Sonnet 3.5 with Computer Use is now available to developers, but Anthropic notes in its blog post that the capability it's still “experimental.” Google makes it tech for watermarking and detecting AI-generated text generally available. Called Synth ID Text, the technology was previously only available to developers but is now available for anyone to download from Hugging Face or Google’s Responsible GenAI Toolkit. SynthID Text has been integrated with Google’s Gemini models since this spring, but the company warns it does still pose limitations and does not perform as well with short text, translated text, or with responses to factual questions. You can read more from TechCrunch.A Florida mother plans to sue Character.AI after her 14-year-old son became obsessed with a chatbot before his suicide. Sewell Setzer III spent months talking to a chatbot on the platform and formed an emotional attachment, messaging the bots dozens of times a day with updates on his life, according to the New York Times. His family and friends saw him get sucked deeper into his phone, lose interest in his previous hobbies, and go straight into his room where he chatted with the bot for hours at a time. His parents brought him to several sessions with a therapist, but it was in the chatbot to which he confided his thoughts of suicide. Setzer killed himself while chatting with the bot in February. Longtime OpenAI policy researcher resigns to “publish freely” in the non-profit sector. Miles Brundage, OpenAI’s head of policy and senior advisor for AGI readiness, announced on X that he’s leaving the company after six years to pursue independent policy research and advocacy and that the team working on preparedness for AGI will be disbanded. In his post, Brundage encouraged employees at the company to “remember that their voices matter.” “OpenAI has a lot of difficult decisions ahead, and won’t make the right decisions if we succumb to groupthink,” he wrote. His departure marks yet another high-level resignation for the company. You can read more from Fortune’s David Meyer here.FORTUNE ON AIHow Europe’s tech-shy Fortune 500 is embracing AI —By Ryan HoggSoftBank, Mastercard, and Anthropic cyber chiefs sound alarms on AI phishing and deepfakes—but those aren’t the only things keeping them up at night — By Sharon GoldmanTim Cook makes another trip to China as local users gripe about Apple’s AI delays in the world’s largest smartphone market — By Lionel LimChipotle just released an AI recruiting tool to gain an edge in the ‘competitive labor market’ — By Brit Morse and Emma BurleighAI CALENDAROct. 28-30: Voice & AI, Arlington, Va.Nov. 19-22: Microsoft Ignite, ChicagoDec. 2-6: AWS re:Invent, Las VegasDec. 8-12: Neural Information Processing Systems (Neurips) 2024, Vancouver, British ColumbiaDec. 9-10: Fortune Brainstorm AI, San Francisco (register here)EYE ON AI NUMBERS$1,000That’s how much people found guilty of violating Singapore’s new law banning the use of deepfakes and AI-manipulated media in online election advertisements could be fined. Alternatively they could receive 12 months jail time. Social media companies can be fined up to $1,000,000. The law covers both deceptive audio and video and covers a wide range of manipulations, from entirely fabricated media to subtle changes like changing the pauses in a candidate's speech.

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