Training the models is very resource intensive, but after that it's basically fine. I can run Midjourney image generation on my modest gaming laptop. Takes maybe 30 seconds for a high-resolution image at a laptop's "gaming mode" power consumption.
AI image generation is comparable in electric use to e.g. playing Valheim or Elden Ring.
It's when it's scaled up industrially that it becomes a huge waste of electricity. Me playing Valhelm for 5 minutes is nothing. My startup creating 20000 bots playing Valheim 24/7 is a problem for society.
i mean yeah, statistically, an already mined diamond is a child already dead. you would just stop new diamond mining, or move away from child consumptory diamond mining, you aren't going to completely demolish every child diamond in existence though, there's no point, harms already done. Might as well leave them in the market.
No, using an already-trained model doesnât âuse upâ the model in exactly the same way that pirating a movie doesnât steal anything from Hollywood.
this is actually a really debatable argument. If you're buying it first hand, from somebody trying to make money, yes it could arguably be unethical, but if you're buying it second hand, i.e. someone who just doesn't want it anymore, you could make the argument that it's an ethically net positive transaction. Since they no longer want the diamond, and wish to have money instead, and you wish to have the diamond, and less money. Everybody wins in 2nd hand deals, weirdly enough.
In this analogy, using the diamond does use it up. In the sense that none else can use that diamond concurrently. If someone else wants a diamond, more children must die.
This is different from the trained AI model, which can concurrently be used by everyone at the same time, at very little extra cost.
Even if the diamond mine owners stop mining, it's unethical to buy their stockpile of blood diamonds.
Also, there is a cost besides electricity - the theft of artist's work is inherent to the use of the model, not just in the training. The artist is not being compensated whenever an AI generates art in their style, and they may in fact lose their job or have their compensation reduced due to artificial supply.
Finally, this is an analogy, it's not perfect. Picking apart incidental parts of the analogy doesn't really prove anything. Use an analogy to explain a problem, but don't pick apart an analogy as though you're picking apart the problem.
and they may in fact lose their job or have their compensation reduced due to artificial supply.
highly doubt. Any artists that do lose their job are probably mostly ok with it anyway, since it's most likely going to be graphical drivel anyway. In fields like media theres a different argument to be made, but even then it's iffy sometimes. Also i don't think this would be considered artificial supply, it would be artificially insisted demand instead no? Or perhaps an inelastic demand side expectation.
Although, it would be nice to have some actual concrete data on artists and job prospects in relation to AI. Unfortunately it's probably too early to tell right now, since we're just out of the Luddite reactionary phase, who knows.
A very large amount of those dug up diamonds end up as "industrial diamonds." Because they are far from gemstone quality. And they definitely get used up. I have used up my share of them as cutting tools when I was a toolmaker.
I mean yeah: if we went and killed every person who benefits from conflict diamonds and closed all blood diamond mines why wouldn't you be cool with using the resources? Their evil origin has little to do with their practical utility and if the original sin is expiated there's no reason not to?
Like yeah conflict diamonds have basically no purpose because we can make diamonds cheaper and better in labs but in a situation where there are more practical uses (cobalt, LLMs) once we cleanse the land of the sinners why wouldn't we use their ill gotten gains for good?
But we're not "killing" every person who benefits, literally or figuratively. We're continuing to buy their diamonds (pay them in money and data) while they continue to mine (train new models, use copyrighted material).
It's not a perfect analogy, models ape the work of artists and take their jobs; it's like if the diamond was bloody, and as long as it existed, the miner's family not only didn't get compensated for the loss but we're also prevented from getting jobs themselves.
We're not righting the wrong, were making the wrongs even worse. At some point you have to just burn the whole thing down.
Okay, so again, no new machine learning ever, unless you can prove itâs done without environmental impact or affecting peoplesâ right to a dignified existence. Thatâs the wrong righted. Thatâs what youâre advocating. Am I misunderstanding?
The people who were exploited should be the ones to benefit from those diamonds.
i mean probably, but this would be a question of what the law says. If we're talking philosophy that's irrelevant here, but to include it anyway, it would be something like "the most ethical source of any given item should be most preferred over any other source of said item" or if we're operating under an ideology of anti-human exploitation idk where we would even start. You need a really concrete definition of exploitation, and how to combat it effectively, without just exploiting more people.
Sounds like you think we should use the diamonds. I wouldn't be cool with using those diamonds because they belong to the people who were forced to mine them, not me.
I wouldnât be cool with using those diamonds because they belong to the people who were forced to mine them
well most of them are dead aren't they? Are we going to put them back into their coffins? Or, how are we planning on redistributing these?
Dead people can't own things, so that seems like an illogical conclusion, perhaps their estate or family? They didn't do the work, but they would arguably be most entitled to it.
Is Midjourney available for use locally now? Or have you misunderstood Midjourney taking 30 seconds to generate from their server as happening locally?
That sounds a bit too much. Generating an sdxl image and then scaling it up is the common procedure, but that should not take 2 minutes on a 40xx card. For reference I can generate 3 batches of 5 images (without the upscaling step) in less than 2 minutes on my 4070ti. And that's without using faster sdxl models like lightning or turbo or whatever.