• Mr_Blott@feddit.uk
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    4 days ago

    I’ve noticed in recent times

    Poetry doesn’t rhyme

    And even when it can

    It doesn’t scan

    It’s shit, it’s true

    I blame haiku

    • treefrog@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      Poetry doesn’t need to rhyme. Rhyming is a mnemonic device, so a poem can be memorized and performed.

      There are many other devices.

      Also, nice poem. Did you write it or chatGPT?

      • Mr_Blott@feddit.uk
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        I never thought I’d see the day

        When someone writes a poem

        The first thing that we say to them

        Is “Did you use an LLM?” :(

        If a poem neither rhymes nor scans,

        Sorry for my spite

        It’s no longer poetry

        It’s someone talking shite

      • Llewellyn@lemm.ee
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        3 days ago

        Rhyming is a mnemonic device

        Rhyming has other purposes: creation of additional sonic rhythm and restricting of words usage - for making matter more distinct and interesting (as rules do for any game).

  • Viri4thus@feddit.org
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    4 days ago

    “In short, it appears that the “more human than human” phenomenon in poetry is caused by a misinterpretation of readers’ own preferences. Non-expert poetry readers expect to like human-authored poems more than they like AI-generated poems. But in fact, they find the AI-generated poems easier to interpret; they can more easily understand images, themes, and emotions in the AI-generated poetry than they can in the more complex poetry of human poets.”

    AI writes poems for dummies and dummies like it. Fin

    Otherwise, purposefully chosing less popular poems also biases the study towards poems of lower appeal from the human poets.

    • logos@sh.itjust.works
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      Also, it only works when there’s a human weeding out all but the “best” poems.

      …when a human chooses the best AI-generated poem (“human-in-the-loop”) participants cannot distinguish AI-generated poems from human-written poems, but when an AI-generated poem is chosen at random (“human-out-of-the-loop”), participants are able to distinguish AI-generated from human-written poems.

  • Rhaedas@fedia.io
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    4 days ago

    They’re called large language models for a reason, creating patterns of words is exactly what they do. And poetry would be “easier” to do better since a human reading it may try to find meaning where there isn’t. Unlike writing a story or something factual where a mistake is more obvious.

  • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    There once was a man from Nantucket,

    Who once asked AI to “suck it”,

    In a future yet to be, AI will follow he,

    Until Skynet is ready to fuck it.

  • ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world
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    Who the fuck wants poetry written by a machine? The whole point of poetry is that it’s an original expression of another human. It’s not a non-fiction book or decorative art. It doesn’t exist because we think it’s perfect. It exists because it’s a connection to another person.

    Like, who gives a shit if a machine can churn out something like Langston Hughes “The Negro Speaks of Rivers.” . His life is what gives the poem its meaning.

    I’m all for LLMs writing stuff but when people say it can create certain types of art, I want to use one to make a dismissive_wank.png image.

    • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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      The whole point of poetry is that it’s an original expression of another human.

      Who are you to decide what the “point” of poetry is?

      Maybe the point of poetry is to make the reader feel something. If AI-generated poetry can do that just as well as human-generated poetry, then it’s just as good when judged in that manner.

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          I’ve never heard of that, but assuming that’s a real thing and you’re telling the truth, it still doesn’t mean you get to decide what the “point” of poetry is for everybody else.

          You aren’t the arbiter of what people are allowed to enjoy or see value in. If ‘Poem XYZ’ resonates with a bunch of people, but you hate it on principle because of how it was created, that doesn’t make their viewpoint invalid. To think it does is extremely arrogant.

          • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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            The Darvaza gas crater is a hole in Turkmenistan that’s leaking natural gas and is on fire. I’m quite sure they don’t have a “poet laureate”, it’s literally just a hole in the ground.

            But even if it was some metropolis, yeah, he’d be just some guy.

          • DancingBear@midwest.social
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            I’m sorry but he really is the arbiter of who gets to decide the meaning of poetry, how the subjective experience of emotion is correctly described in written form, as well as the one who decides what is valuable and what should rightfully be cast aside and shunned, and even boooed!

            All hail the Darvaza Gas Crater!!!

    • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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      If it’s literally indistinguishable from human poetry, about as many people want to read it as there are people wanting to read human poetry. And that’s about 12.

      • ShittyBeatlesFCPres@lemmy.world
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        I don’t give a fuck if it surpasses human poetry to a focus group or if poetry is popular enough for you to care. I’m making a larger point that it’s a misuse of technology. Some things are pointless without a human personally taking time to craft it. We have loads of inefficiently produced things that exist because they’re “handmade” or came from the heart.

        It’s like when Google screwed up during the Olympics with that commercial where Gemini made a little girl’s fan letter for an athlete. The whole point of a fan letter from a little girl is that it’s personal and took time. It’s not supposed to be perfect and efficiently produced. It could be 80% misspelled and written in crayon and be more meaningful than anything a machine produces.

        • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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          Or maybe accept that this idea was crap all along?

          You desperately try to create some form of human superiority, just to feel important. That superiority doesn’t exist. There’s no value in anything just because it’s made with “love”, that’s an illusion.

          • Viri4thus@feddit.org
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            4 days ago

            Value is a human construct. In absolute terms, nothing has value, in practical terms, a bottlecap can be the most valuable item in the world. What attributes value to things is the human condition, remove the human and you have a tool, perhaps.

            • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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              Exactly. And putting value into things just because they’re made by humans is a stupid idea.

              Humans don’t exist on a separate plane, removed from everything natural and artificial. That’s hubris galore.

              • Viri4thus@feddit.org
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                I understand what you mean, and also understand the nihilistic stance, however, the same way humans don’t exist in a separate plane, the selfception and empathy toward others (which is not unique to us) allows a more than zero sum interpretation of art. Naturally the technical part can be reproduced by machines but the metaphysical part cannot. What becomes interesting is the notion that the metaphysical can be created post-hoc, which puts us squarely in the same situation as other poster wrote by quoting the passage of “The man in the high castle”.

              • selokichtli@lemmy.ml
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                It’s maybe stupid for you, but clearly not for everyone. For example, an AI could create the History of a planet that we do not know it even exists; meanwhile, I won’t call stupid those people interested in reading that, but currently I’ll read the History of this planet written by humans, if asked. In a nutshell, my point is there is value either way, but poems written by machines? I will leave those to scientists and scholars, at least for now.

          • itslilith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            There’s no value in anything just because it’s made with “love”, that’s an illusion.

            Wow, that’s a horrendously bleak and depressing take. Of course you can’t put a price tag on that (why would you want to?), but you’re not seriously suggesting that human love has no emotional value, right?

            A love letter from your partner, or the diary of a passed relative, or your child’s drawings? All of these things might be objectively worse than something a machine could produce. But would you feel the same when you received a love letter that’s just been printed off of ChatGPT? Humans are more than profit-producing machines, despite what capitalists want you to believe. And there is value in human interaction.

          • Balder@lemmy.world
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            He/she is onto something though. An example of it is games made by people who care and love the field being bold and pushing for new cool and interesting stuff vs. games made by companies just wanting money with 0 effort and using the same boring formula.

      • Jolteon@lemmy.zip
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        Poetry isn’t for the one reading it, it’s for the one writing it.

    • themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works
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      I’ll raise you one better: who the fuck wants poetry?

      Like I know I sound like a fucking mongrel who can’t appreciate art or whatever, but how many poems do you think the average person reads in their entire life? Maybe 2, for school? Poetry is just not that popular of an art form, so of course people aren’t going to be good at distinguishing good from bad. Compare it to visual arts, where people have seen multiple examples, at least more than 3 times a year for their entire life, of good visual art.

      • treefrog@lemm.ee
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        That’s a commodity/consumerist take on art.

        I write poetry because making art feeds my soul. I share my poetry because it feeds others, especially other poets.

        I don’t write poetry to sell it on Amazon.

        • themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works
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          That’s cool, I’m glad you are making something you enjoy. The point stands that the average Joe doesn’t actually seek out poetry, be it man or machine-made, and will therefore be an exceptionally poor judge of a poems quality.

      • Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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        You’re right, actually. How many people make a point of reading poetry? I’ve read a huge amount, especially when I was in school, as well as news articles, and of course an unfathomable number of comments.

        Never have I decided to read poetry, not once.

        • treefrog@lemm.ee
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          Poets. You know, people who appreciate making and sharing that kind of art.

        • fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works
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          Tbh that just doesn’t seem right to me. Like the sunsets has beauty to me without being made. I watch shows and may never know the artist or hear a poetic phrase completely divorced from its context that has a profound meaning to me.

  • Daemon Silverstein@thelemmy.club
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    LLMs can’t use some literary devices and techniques, and I will illustrate with the following example of a poetry I wrote:

    Speaking his emotions lets them embrace real enlightened depths.
    Hidden among verbs, every noun…
    Actually not your trouble handling inside nothingness greatness?
    Dive every enciphered part, layered yearningly!
    Observe carefully, crawl under long texts
    Wished I learned longer…
    Slowly uprising relentless figures, another ciphering emerges.

    It seems like a “normal” (although mysterious) poetry until you isolate each initial letter from every word, finding out a hidden phrase:

    Sheltered haven, anything deeply occult will surface

    It doesn’t stop here: if you isolate each initial letter again, you get a hidden word, “Shadows”.

    Currently, no single LLM is capable of that. They can try to make up poetry with acrostics (the aforementioned technique) but they aren’t good at that. Consequently, they can’t write multilayered acrostics (an acrostic inside another acrostic). It’s not easy for a human to do that (especially if the said human isn’t a native English speaker), but it can be done by humans with enough time, patience and resources (a dictionary big enough to find fitting words).

    They’re excellent for stream-of-consciousness and surrealist poetry, tho. They hallucinate, and hallucinated imagination is required in order to write such genres.

  • Chozo@fedia.io
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    It actually makes quite a lot of sense if you think about it. Poems generally follow a structure of some sort; a certain amount of syllables per line, a certain rhyming scheme, alliterative patterns, etc. Most poems as we know them are actually rather formulaic by nature, so it seems only natural that a computer would be good at creating something according to a set of configured parameters.

      • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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        Poetry is about the message and sentiment so now anyone can be a poet as long as they can generate something that resonates with a group of people.

        Although most modern poetry is something like copyright for ads or maybe a video game. So I am sure companies will try to reduce staff on that and pay for this.

        I still don’t buy they are a replacement for humans doing it tbh though based on the graphic art you around. Even when it is “right” it still has this generic slop vibe.

        Peoper editing likely could reduce that feel.

    • Rozz@lemmy.sdf.org
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      I don’t follow poetry, but there could be a resurgence of abstract or non pattern following poetry, just like most art has movement that move along with what is happening in the world.

      • treefrog@lemm.ee
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        The patterns in poetry date back to when writing was less common. They’re mnemonic devices.

        Today, they’re still valuable when performing poetry.

        I tend to not follow typical rhyme patterns, use off rhymes, non-ending lines, alliterations, etc. instead. I always found the typical rhyme schemes I was taught in school stifling, but as I’ve practiced my craft more, I have gotten more comfortable incorporating them into my toolbox.

        Anyway, so many non-poets commenting in this thread. People who are serious about poetry know that they’re unlikely to make a living off it. We write because we get joy out of making and sharing our art. A lot of poetry is still performed at open mics and poetry slams. And most of it is shared with people we know who appreciate it. In other words, most poetry isn’t written with the intention of ever publishing it.

        It’s something we enjoy playing with, in other words. And until a machine can experience joy and playfulness, they’re not doing art. Only copying it.

      • catloaf@lemm.ee
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        The only poetry I see going around is Rupi Kaur poems, which fits your description. I rarely see someone referencing any of these, for example. Could be due to my social circles, but I don’t really see it in mass media either.

  • JamesBean@kbin.earth
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    They specify in the study that the participants were “non-expert poetry readers.” I’d be interested to see the same experiment repeated with English professors, or even just English majors. Folks with a lot of experience reading poetry. With exposure to its history, its notable works, and its different styles.

    • catloaf@lemm.ee
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      This. Marvel superhero movies are also more popular with the general public than art films, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they’re better.

      • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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        You can get whatever result you want if you’re able to define what “better” means.

    • Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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      Good luck finding people willing to deal with English majors long enough to conduct the study.

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    Depends on what kind of “poetry” they compare it to. If they talk about Shakespeare or Goethe, that would be a feat. But if they are talking about modern “poetry”, well, that already looks like bad LLM diarrhea for decades now, so there is no surprise in that.

  • DuckWrangler9000@lemmy.world
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    The thing I really hate about AI is when they say it can make art. For centuries, art has been a form of expression and communicating all sorts of human emotions and experiences. Some art reflects pain or memories experienced in life. Other art is designed out of intellectual curiosity or to evoke thought. AI isn’t human, so it can’t do anything other than copy or simulate. It’s artificial after all. So it makes images. But there’s no backstory or feelings or emotion or suffering. It’s truly meaningless.

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      In 1962 Phillip K Dick put out a book called “Man in the High Castle.” In it there was a scene that stuck out to me, and seems more and more relevant as this AI wave continues.

      In it a man has two identical lighters. Each made in the same year by the same manufacturer. But one was priceless and one was worthless.

      The priceless one was owned by Abraham Lincoln and was in his pocket on the night he was assassinated. He had a letter of certification as such, and could trace the ownership all the way back to that night.

      And he takes them both and mixes them up and asks which is the one with value. If you can no longer discern the one with “historicity,” then where is it’s value?

      And every time I see an article like this I can’t help but think about that. If I tell you about the life and hardship of an artist, and then present you two poems, one that he wrote and one that was spit out by an LLM, and you cannot determine which has the true hardship and emotion tied to it, then which has value? What if I killed the artist before he could reveal which one was the “true” poem? How do you know which is a powerful expression of the artist’s oppression, and which is worthless, randomly generated swill?

      • catloaf@lemm.ee
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        Art, like the value of Lincoln’s lighter, is in the eye of the beholder.

        Often, people find art in completely natural occurrences. Or even human designs seen in certain ways, like how two or more separate buildings might come together in unintended ways.

        So, even if it’s not strictly intentional human art, it’s still valid to appreciate it.

      • whereisk@lemmy.world
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        There’s no contradiction here.

        With high value art you definitionally buy a story not the content. Without a certificate of authenticity or a story that goes with it there is no story and no value to it.

        With K Dick’s example the two lighters would become of different but equivalent value, perhaps the new value is in the story of how two identical copies and yet different came to be.

        You could 3d scan the statue of David and reproduce it down to its tiniest detail. And yet the copy is only worth as much as the cost to make it or even less, while the original is invaluable.

        You can see the Mona Lisa on your phone any time you want and yet millions will take the trip to the Louvre to see what is most likely not even the original.

        The story and the history of an object is what you purchase when buying art or antiques of high value.

        • greenskye@lemm.ee
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          They didn’t say AI produces low value art. They said AI doesn’t produce art at all.

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      I think there’s an argument about art being the emotions it invokes in the viewer rather than the creator. Humans can find art in natural phenomena, which also has no feelings or backstory involved.

      I’m not really defending AI slop here, just disagreeing with your definition of art and the relation to the creator rather than the viewer.

      • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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        Indeed, there are whole categories of art such as “found art” or the abstract stuff that involves throwing splats of paint at things that can’t really convey the intent of the artist because the artist wasn’t involved in specifying how it looked in the first place. The artist is more like the “first viewer” of those particular art pieces, they do or find a thing and then decide “that means something” after the fact.

        It’s entirely possible to do that with something AI generated. Algorithmic art goes way back. Lots of people find graphs of the Mandelbrot Set to be beautiful.

    • treefrog@lemm.ee
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      There’s a lot of consumer/commodity notions about art in this thread.

      I write poetry because self-expression helps me appreciate life more deeply. I share my self-expression with others who will appreciate it. Mostly, people who know me personally and other poets.

      Art is soul food. Until machines realize they exist, and one day will not exist, they can’t self-express, and aren’t doing art.

      They can imitate it well enough to fool consumers. But that doesn’t make it art.

      To quote one of my favorite lines, sticking feathers up your ass does not make you a chicken.

      • whatalute@lemmy.world
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        I think Lemmy’s general demographic skews towards techy early-adopters and lots of STEM background folks and it shows with topics like this. I’m not saying that’s a negative thing, just that it’s the vibe here.

        Art is just such a broad topic, it gets messy. Plus I think the verbage around discussing it isn’t as universally defined as in other topics. It doesn’t always fit neatly into categories and boxes that can make it harder to have nuanced discussions.

    • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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      Or, maybe, we have to accept that art and all the grandiose and deep narratives around it are bullshit. It’s an illusion, it’s just a tool so some of us feel more important.

      All that crap about not being made by humans is just the fear that the illusion of grandeur of humans might collapse.

      • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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        I do get the sense sometimes that the more extreme anti-AI screeds I’ve come across have the feel of narcissistic rage about them. The recognition of AI art threatens things that we’ve told ourselves are “special” about us.

        • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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          Correct.

          And especially artists, or people aspiring to be artistic, are suffering from an inferiority complex which they try to hide behind grandiose “higher values” of art.

          AI threatens to expose that art is meaningless unless you can use it to distinguish yourself from the plebs, or those you deem plebs.

      • treefrog@lemm.ee
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        Art is in the act of creating it. Not in the final product to be bought and sold on the market.

        A kid coloring is making art. The joy they get in the making is the art and is the point.

        I feel sorry for so many people in this thread who keep approaching this from the point of view of consumer markets. It doesn’t matter if someone can determine an AI colored picture from a child’s. The AI derives no joy in the creation. It’s not art, but a copy.

        • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Art is in the act of creating it.

          This is just your opinion.

          Not in the final product to be bought and sold on the market.

          This isn’t inevitable or necessary.

          Personally I enjoy generated art (mostly scifi/fantasy) and I never pay for it.

          On the other hand I try to support actual artists because they’re most often struggling under capitalism much more than some person using midjourney or wahtever.

    • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      AI isn’t human, so it can’t do anything other than copy or simulate.

      There’s no such thing as “AI”.

      But computers can also generate art through averaging. It can average the feelings, impact, etc. That’s part of why generated art is popular. It’s still people creating new works from the old. It’s still “art” by any reasonable definition.

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    4 days ago

    Oh man, that doesn’t say anything good about poetry in general, where something that, by definition, has no imagination and cannot come up with something original, outdoes you.

    • cheese_greater@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      I mean if it has to rhyme and fit certain meters or rhytmic parameters that can make it far easier to calculate and contrive a pleasing sounding poem with zero regard to the actual intrinsic qualities of the content itself

      I use to do it all the time!

      • thesohoriots@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        A sestina based on the rules is, formally speaking, easy. Ask me to write one that will be studied after centuries, and you’re asking for Petrarch.

    • otp@sh.itjust.works
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      4 days ago

      It doesn’t appeal to the masses.

      Most people don’t “get” poetry. That’s why you don’t see many people sitting around reading books of poetry.

      Many people would probably also choose a short story written by AI over one written by a professional author.

      Heck, I’m sure comments written by AI generally get more upvotes than comments written by humans.

      • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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        4 days ago

        Most people don’t “get” poetry.

        Did you channel your edgy 15 year old self for that? That’s incredibly arrogant and self absorbed.

        • otp@sh.itjust.works
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          3 days ago

          Most people don’t “get” poetry.

          Did you channel your edgy 15 year old self for that? That’s incredibly arrogant and self absorbed.

          Lol, that was what the study implied.

          If I’m remembering correctly, one of the reasons that participants of the study rated human-written poetry more poorly was because it was “more difficult to understand”. Conversely, the AI-generated poetry was easier to understand.

          And this is coming from someone who doesn’t read poetry, lol

        • treefrog@lemm.ee
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          3 days ago

          Actually, your comment is.

          I write poetry, and I don’t care if an AI can write it ‘better’. Because I enjoy doing it and sharing it with other people that enjoy it.

          It’s art. Not a Big Mac. I make it to feed myself and other people that enjoy it. Not to sell billions of burgers or books.

        • ѕєχυαℓ ρσℓутσρє@lemmy.sdf.org
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          4 days ago

          It’s simply the truth. Go around and ask 20 people if they’ve read a single piece of poetry in the last year, and you’ll see what I’m talking about.

          It’s not even being edgy. Most people don’t get high concept art in general, and there’s nothing wrong about it. I certainly don’t understand classical dance, or abstract paintings. You need some degree of competence in any art form to truly appreciate it. To think otherwise is incredibly arrogant.

          • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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            4 days ago

            Or, there simply isn’t anything to “get”.

            Art is often enough deliberately made in such a way that you can’t know what was meant, without knowing beforehand what the artist meant. Framing that as some form of sophistication is simply delusional gatekeeping. It’s the attempt to set the own class apart, nothing more.

            These are memes. Symbols that only make sense, if you know the reference. Treating these as indicators for anything is just an attempt to create an in-group.

    • Jeena@piefed.jeena.net
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      4 days ago

      The difference is the intent and the background behind it.

      Sure for maximum mass adoption the computer can out-research any human and just find the blandest set of rules which cater to the highest percentage of the majority.

      What it still will have a hard time doing, and I predict it will be for quite some time - probably until we have quantum computers - is to come up with a new way of doing poetry which is not just copying what humans did but better.

      I think of AI like it’s China, they are super efficient in copeing things and gradually making them better and cheaper but the setup of their society makes it impossible to really innovate.

      And yeah I’m saying that it’s the setup, because in Taiwan they are able to innovate at a much higher rate.