The fediverse used to feel pretty anti-ai, but over the past month or two I’ve noticed a LOT of generated memes and images, and they tend to have positive votes.

Has there been a sudden culture shift here? Or is there a substantial percentage of people just unable to tell the difference anymore?

  • Deflated0ne@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    The internet is steadily becoming Facebook. Full of idiots being force fed AI slop. Alarmingly confident in their wrongness about almost everything.

  • SolidShake@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    If people would stop talking about AI all day then it probably wouldn’t be used as much as it is every day.

  • PastafARRian@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 months ago

    John Oliver did a show on this recently, in summary: “not all AI is spam, but all spam is AI”. My take, legitimate accounts with a long history are cheap to generate, they’re a great purchase to help spread bad faith disinformation and look legit. It’s a business model.

  • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I just haven’t noticed really. The reality is that memes, even ones that were made by hand with a lot of effort, are disposable content. Most of them will get looked at for like 10 seconds tops before you either move on or maybe check out the comments. Nobody who isn’t obsessed with finding the AI slop is going to notice the difference between an AI meme and just a shitty photoshop job.

    That’s not to say I’m not concerned by the effects of that. Lower effort needed means more low effort stuff, but it’s not really something I’ve clocked as being particularly out of the ordinary.

    • whaleross@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      I’m thinking it’s like ads. Some people see them, read them, click the links. Others recognize by glance and filter them out without bothering to process.

      Social media, and internet in general, has always been a wild mix of top notch content and bottom of the barrel garbage sharing screen estate.