"I fuc**ng hate generative AI": Procreate CEO vows never to use the technology in its products

midian182

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A hot potato: Despite a lot of public opinion being against the use of generative AI and companies force-feeding the tech into our mouths, most firms believe not embracing it is commercial suicide. However, the widely used iPad design app Procreate is taking an opposing stance: not only has it vowed never to add generative AI features to its products, but CEO James Cuda has also announced that "I really fuc**ng hate generative AI."

The use of generative AI to create images and art has drawn the ire of artists angry that their work is being used to train the systems without their knowledge, consent, or accreditation. The fact they don't get paid for enabling something that could put them out of a job isn't lost on them, either.

Virtually every tech company is pouring resources into generative AI, even though we've seen huge public pushback, such as when Wizards of the Coast unintentionally featured it in Magic: The Gathering promo art and D&D book. There was also outcry when it was discovered that the studio behind Disney+ Marvel show Secret Invasion had used AI-generated content for its opening sequence.

Procreate, however, isn't a fan of the technology. In a post on its website titled 'AI is not our future,' the company states that "creativity is made, not generated."

"Generative AI is ripping the humanity out of things. Built on a foundation of theft, the technology is steering us toward a barren future," Procreate writes. "We think machine learning is a compelling technology with a lot of merit, but the path generative AI is on is wrong for us."

The company goes on to say that it is not chasing a technology that poses a threat to human creativity, and while doing so might put it at risk of being left behind, "we see this road less traveled as the more exciting and fruitful one for our community."

Procreate CEO Cuda didn't pull any punches in a video posted to the company's X profile. "I really f***ing hate generative AI," Cuda said. "I don't like what's happening in the industry and I don't like what it's doing to artists. We're not going to be introducing any generative AI into our products."

Artists have been quick to applaud Procreate's stance against GenAI, especially in light of Adobe's use of the tech, which resulted in a backlash over fears it was using user content to train its systems. Adobe later clarified that this wasn't the case.

Referencing the Adobe incident, Procreate emphasized that it does not have access to users' art, by design, nor does it track user activity. And unlike Adobe and many other apps, it charges a single $12.99 purchase price rather than a never-ending subscription cost.

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What positive we expect from generative AI:

1. The people who lost their jobs to AI will unite in desperation and set companies on fire along with the board of directors, thus completing the workforce "optimization" loop.
2. The AI will create some kind of global problem, akin to Skynet, or something that will collapse world-wide order, which will create an incentive to make use of AI illegal, with hefty punishment.

Short of the above, nothing good to be seen on the horizon from the generative AI.
 
I do think that there are areas where AI is useful, however, I think it is hard to make a value use case for AI within the context that this guy is talking about.

Clowns pretending to be artists. :rolleyes:
 
I use it in photoshop as a TIME saver. When I'm editing photos, before, if there were say a blurred (bokeh) sign or person in the background of a photo, I would draw a lasso around it, delete it, then use the clone stamp tool to blend the area to make it look normal. Depending on what I was removing, it could take a long time to remove it and clean up the area. Now, with the generative AI, just draw around it and either use the AI or the delete & fill to clean it up. I've never used it to "create" anything, but boy is it a time saver when I have to edit a photo I've taken.
 
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