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Kathy Slattengren's avatar

It's fascinating to see how AI enhances the ability to create a video like this. Amazing! I'd love to use this type of animation to create parenting scenarios that demonstrate various responses. Also it would be awesome if a person could enter a virtual environment to practice interpersonal skills and learn from virtual consequences (rather than real life consequences).

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Karen Kanne Ngowe's avatar

I follow the Corridor Crew on YT and saw their method of creating AI-filtered animation based on live action - sans the spots https://youtu.be/_9LX9HSQkWo

All the AI engines scrape IP from all over, regardless of ownership. This is a problem, maybe in a different way than previous IP web content being shared without source citation or license. Because the AI art & writing engines essentially mashup multiple artists/writers' styles, it's not so easy to identify the original source from the derivative end-product. As a former academic writing teacher (ESL), I honestly don't have a problem with AI generating a rough draft of something, that when properly cited, could serve as the bones of a then made more original/personal piece of writing. If I were the instructor, I'd like the student to turn in the original AI product and the student's search strings to compare to their finished product.

I think these AI engines are generating first drafts of animation too, as illustrated in your video.

This is the way...?

Let the IP lawyers sort the rest out?

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