So, how much money do you think Matt and Trey are going to sue them for?

  • @thallamabond@lemmy.world
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    122 years ago

    "Fable started in 2018 as a spinoff from Facebook’s Oculus (how times have changed since then), working on VR films — a medium that never really took off. Now it has seemingly pivoted to AI, "

    I wonder how much of the ai hype is just huge investments into hardware, looking for profits.

  • LEX
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    372 years ago

    They say pretty clearly in their Twatter post that they are not the IP holders and the episode is for research only, so I seriously doubt Trey and Matt will care.

    Likely worst case they get a cease and desist to take it down, so they do.

    • @Steeve@lemmy.ca
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      142 years ago

      We think the timing is correct — we are right in the middle of the biggest strike in 60 years, by releasing the research (but not the ability for anyone to create episodes of protected IP) we hope [for] the Guilds in Hollywood to negotiate strong, strong, strong protections that producers cannot use AI tools without the express permission of artists. Frankly the IP holders also need to figure out how to negotiate with AI chatbot companies who are profiting from their work.

      And what’s the problem here? They aren’t trying to profit off this tech here, they’re building a stronger case for the strike. Did the writers of this article read their source material?

  • @ffelix@feddit.de
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    12 years ago

    The video is password protected now. Did anyone get a chance to download the episode?

  • @Aimhere@midwest.social
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    2 years ago

    I remember how, years ago, an AI was asked to write a script for a Batman comic book, given a bunch of real comic issues as its learning input. The resulting script was horribly stilted, and hilarious to read. It was popular enough that an artist turned it into an actual comic book.

    Today’s AIs have come a long way.

    Edit: just out of curiosity, I asked ChatGPT to “write a Batman comic book script, with The Joker as the villain”. That’s it. No other input.

    What came out was far less stilted than the one mentioned above, but bare-bones, extremely generic, and boring. The real Batman writers have little to fear at the moment.

  • @fubo@lemmy.world
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    1142 years ago

    False. The Hollywood strikes (plural) are not principally about AI.

    A more salient issue is that streaming TV & movie services do not pay residuals.

    • Pons_Aelius
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      1142 years ago

      They are about both.

      Short term streaming residuals are important.

      Long term AI protections are a must.

    • Bleeping Lobster
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      272 years ago

      I almost feel like the AI proposal was a form of ‘dead cat’ strategy; while everyone is understandably angry about AI and fixated on that, no-one is talking about the actual issue that kicked all this off (the share of residual royalty payments)

  • Jeena
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    312 years ago

    But doing something like this during that time is totally in character for Southpark.

    • FaceDeer
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      42 years ago

      Indeed, they already did an episode about ChatGPT. It wasn’t bad, and in traditional South Park style it roasted both “sides” of the debate.

  • @Wander@yiffit.net
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    552 years ago

    Just watched it. Writers have nothing to worry about for now. I do admit I laughed once, though.

    • @restingboredface@lemmy.worldOP
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      22 years ago

      My thinking is that from a studio’s perspective it may be like a proof of concept that AI can get close enough to do what they care about make a passable imitation that gets buts in seats that will generate ad revenue or ticket sales. Fundamentally they aren’t really concerned about producing quality material as long as it sells, so if the AI can get them to something kind of good its likely worth their attention. I think that’s what writers and actors are concerned about and that is why even an unfunny south park episode is a threat. Fable can say their work is research all day long but their goal can easily change the second a studio shows up with a check in hand.

      Also it is not clear here is how much human editing and tweaking was done after the AI was finished with it’s part. I suspect people kind of helped the AI get to a final product, but without them disclosing their procedure it’s hard to know.

    • @holemcross@lemmy.world
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      352 years ago

      I took a look and it’s honestly a lot further along than I was expecting in terms of capability. In all honesty, for low level conent this is already surpassing the minimum necessary and I can already imagine greedy, low effort art thieves going all in on these and jaming out completely shows. And I expect people will watch them, or at least tolerate some of them.

      • @Wander@yiffit.net
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        22 years ago

        I can imagine this being a problem for low effort youtube kid shows, like the ones that caused the whole elsagate controversy.

        • 6daemonbag
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          12 years ago

          Ugh I’ve left autoplay on other some science videos while indie other stuff and it took me a long while before I realized it had progressed to ai jargon space videos. So fucking annoying

      • @Fedizen@lemmy.world
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        52 years ago

        Its so wooden and all the jokes replaced with generalized statements. Did you actually watch it? Most low grade Youtube content knocks this out of the park.

        The only thing these media companies will be doing by replacing a single writer with AI is making their content closer to the static noise floor of content that comes out of Youtube and similar sites already.

      • FaceDeer
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        132 years ago

        I’m rather impressed by how coherent it was. It had themes, distinct characters, a plot arc, and so forth. And some very nice meta humor. I don’t know how much of this comes entirely out of the LLM scriptwriter and how much was prompted in, but even assuming that this was done from a human-created outline it’s still a big step.

    • @kromem@lemmy.world
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      82 years ago

      You are making the same mistake I see a lot of people make when it comes to AI, which is looking at the status quo as a snapshot rather than a change over time.

      The last widely reported on AI generated ‘show’ was the Seinfeld one from…checks notes…a few months ago.

      The leap between what that was a few months back and this here is quite something.

      So your “right now” may be true for today, but quite possibly by as early as the end of this year there will very much be something to worry about.

      (Though really, there still won’t be much to worry about, as the future will almost certainly be AI plus human efforts, not either or.)

      • @Steeve@lemmy.ca
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        22 years ago

        Though really, there still won’t be much to worry about, as the future will almost certainly be AI plus human efforts, not either or.

        Think the concern is AI+humans means a lot less humans needed to do the job

        • @kromem@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          There are a few fields where there’s capped demand so extra supply would mean less humans.

          But I think people will be surprised by just how much of our economy is capped by supply, and what happens to niche demand as supply rapidly increases.

          The people most in trouble are the ones that really suck at what they do, and whose only job security is constrained supply.

          But at the same time, lowering transactional costs (in the sense of the essay “the nature of the firm”) will mean a lot more opportunities for small and medium entrepreneurship around passion side gigs suddenly being economically viable as full time gigs.

          In reality, the groups most screwed long term here are going to be larger corporations who lose the advantages of scale but are still weighed down by the hindrance of slow moving bureaucracy.

      • @ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world
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        52 years ago

        I think you’re making the same mistake as people who thought self-driving cars would be here 5 years ago. You can’t just extrapolate out technological progress. The relatively easy things get solved first and relatively quickly but we may need a decade to solve some of the most challenging scenarios.

        • @kromem@lemmy.world
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          2 years ago

          Self driving cars were here five years ago, which is when Waymo first had driverless cars on roads. Tesla had a wide release of FSD ‘Beta’ three years ago.

          And there’s a gulf of a difference on the speed at which hardware that has an 8 year average refresh cycle grows in a market and software that can reach a hundred million users in 3 months.

          • @ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world
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            52 years ago

            You’re right. We all love our fully self-driving cars and by 2026, chatbots will write longform narratives so beautifully, we won’t even need cars because we’ll all be transported anywhere we want to go by the magic of books.

  • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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    32 years ago

    It’s truly impressive and severely boring all at the same time. Thing is, this is really early.

    Even if they don’t advance the AI significantly a couple more years in r&d and they could probably make something out of this at least something that would power South Park episodes.

  • @Anissem@lemmy.ml
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    132 years ago

    ‘Animate’ is a generous term here… there’s no animation beyond a simple idle animation, lips and eyes. Other then that every character is just frozen in place.

  • Margot Robbie
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    42 years ago

    Oh no, what if they use this technology to make cartoon version of celebrities like me say things that I would never actually say?

  • @TawdryPorker@lemmy.world
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    72 years ago

    Just FYI, the CEO of Fable Studios is one Edward Saatchi. His father is Maurice Saatchi whose advertising agency was partially responsible for ten years of Conservative rule under Margaret Thatcher. The family absolutely has previous with union bashing.

  • @testuserpleaseupvote@lemmy.world
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    142 years ago

    Where’s the profanity, the swearing? AI, more like Artificially limited, that’s the only joke. Kyle not calling Cartman a fatass once, what?

  • Tedesche
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    12 years ago

    The better question is: do they have to sue the AI instead?

    • @Jackcooper@lemmy.world
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      32 years ago

      Thanks for the link!

      It’s not bad. For some reason Stan Kyle and Tolkien have pretty accurate voices, then Cartman and Garrison aren’t even close.

      South Park would’ve made the mett porker pig go much further lol

      • @Mr_Buscemi@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        22 years ago

        I’ve seen a few more since that one. The SpongeBob ai stream was funny at times but got taken down a few weeks ago right after Squidward sang Frank Sinatra wonderfully.

        Currently there is a family guy one going 24/7 and I keep going back to it every now and then. The prompts the viewers use is so dumb but somehow entertaining.

      • LEX
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        12 years ago

        That was genuinely fascinating to watch.