Artificial intelligence, the advertising industry, our role and happiness.






Where’s all this leading to? I’m no expert, so these are just a few musings.


There are people around who are far more knowledgeable than I, who have already examined this subject in depth, so I’m not going to attempt to do that. But sometimes it’s fun to go down the rabbit hole. 


So here we go…


Like that odd-looking penguin from Wallace and Gromit, artificial intelligence has just arrived on our doorsteps holding a little suitcase. He blinks out at us, but gives nothing away. Personally, I’m feeling a bit suspicious, and I suspect you are too


We see more and more AI entering our daily lives, often working in the background and unnoticed so it's difficult to measure its impact. Many of us in the creative industry are putting on a positive face, saying it’s great for ideas generation, a tool, a new string to our bow. Who are we kidding?  AI will soon have no problem with generating concepts, graphics and ideas that resonate and have meaning, and it will be better than us. 

Speak to Garry Kasparov if you have any doubts about that.

Outside of the creative industries it’s busy reading x-rays better than doctors, its sensors can sniff out diseases and communicate them better than dogs. It’s designing skyscrapers - scaring the bejesus out of architects, etc etc etc... There’s not an industry this revolution will not affect irrevocably.


It seems the only thing left to do creatively, in our neck of the woods, will be to have someone sign off the work. Creative directors and stakeholders will make the final decision on the strategy and creative. We just need their signature and the gig’s a wrap.


But what's so special about signing off a campaign? It’s just intuition at the end of the day. Are we saying AI can’t intuit like people can? It does not have to believe everything it 'thinks' or 'feels'. It just has to make the right decision.


We will soon be able to produce solid, robust, mind-blowing campaigns and they will be made in minutes. Or hundreds of them. What’s the difference? We will test them on people in focus groups. But who needs focus groups when we can model focus groups with the data we have scraped from human behaviour online. We can test ‘artificial’ ideas against artificial (but reliably coherent) digital ‘people’. 





 


And who’s to say a company like, I don’t know, Klaviyo cannot one day put all these tools in a single package? Suddenly an artisan vegan shoe maker in Dundee has at their fingertips, a campaign strategy plus all the creative, designed, written up and produced in six minutes to rival anything Nike could currently produce in six months? With the only difference being, access to a larger advertising and talent/sponsorship budgets.


Will it be important for us that human minds are behind these things? Does it really matter if a brilliant idea comes from a ‘mind’ that doesn’t know the idea is brilliant? 


If it sculpts better than Michelangelo or writes music better than Bach, Bowie or... (I need another ‘b’), will we care?  


Bronski Beat.


What happens to the appreciation of the artist? Even if it could hear you, the AI chef that created the most memorable culinary experience you ever had, will not have the mind or the heart to appreciate your compliments. Is our role now, just to consume? Where’s the fun in that? To whom will we direct our awe?   


It might well be that we are destined live in world of consumption without creation. In a world where the history of every product, book, movie and culinary delight can be traced back to a machine, will our experiences be less meaningful?


AI will be the curators, directors and the editors of our lives. The tasteless can be tasteful. The talentless can have talent. And the ugly will be gorgeous. Where do we play our part or do we somehow evaporate out of the equation? Will we just become conduits? Vessels for the ideas of our virtual helpers?


Let’s say every job that can be done by AI will be done by AI. What’s left? What’s our role? Since the dust will never settle on this technology, maybe the question we should ask is, will the net result of all this augmentation and assistance from our AI partners bring us happiness?




In an ideal world, we might all benefit from this technology, so much so that we have time to philosophise at our leisure, while we contemplate our belly buttons, and compose symphonies for fun. (Because of course, that’s what people tend to do when their spare time is maximised). Or will we continue in our current direction?...


Either way there’s nothing to say that any of this will make us less busy, less stressed, free up more time or make us happier. We are at a profound societal crossroads and it looks like there’s an opportunity right now to choose our path.


Since we don’t yet know what this little penguin has in his suitcase, shouldn’t we be carefully defining what we mean by ‘happiness’, and start writing it into the code of first generation artificial intelligence as a desired outcome?


I can’t answer that question, but ironically, AI most likely will.


Thanks for listening peeps,


Please feel free to leave a comment. I'd love to hear your thoughts.


Best,


_k








Comments

  1. Really great read! As a creative myself, the thought of AI taking on the heavy lifting in our field is a little frightening and I suppose at some point in time it's not too crazy to think it will do the heavy lifting in every industry. I think the important question that you highlighted is that if this future where AI handles everything was to occur, where does that leave us? What can we do to bring ourselves happiness? Like it or not, many people draw their life purpose from their work and making that obsolete could be a huge shock....or maybe we will just have alot more free time for passion projects? Either way, we are certainly on the cusp of a huge revolution!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks very much. Glad you enjoyed it. Yes, you are absolutely correct. We are on the edge of something seismic. I hope it leaves us all in a good place.

      Delete
  2. It's a really interesting moment in time. The internet revolution was gradual for me, it never felt overwhelming in how it changed my life. AI is moving very quickly by comparison. I find it exhilarating and fascinating to watch this capability growing before my eyes every time i use Midjourney, six months ago it was quirky, now it's like - 'what do you want to see? I will do it better than you and your team could with a big budget for the image'. I think your musings are all inevitable, if humans let it happen. And this is where it gets philosophical, if a human creates the AI are AI creations those of humans? If the answer is yes, what's the problem? Who are these humans anyway that think they have a special right to be the only original creators? We're actually the destroyers of everything, that's what the evidence in the court of species says (is that what's in the suitcase?). AI might just be able to think of a way to get us out of our own mess, who is to say that we will do it without AI? I'm ready to hand over the keys! Ha ha. Great blog post, very stimulating.

    ReplyDelete
  3. As interesting as it may be to contemplate the existential notions regarding AI's role in the creative (and other) industries, I think right now it's far more important to become educated on how this tech works, how it was built, and the current impact it's having as it stands, so that we can take the actions necessary to ensure the future of this tech moves in the right direction. Right now, AI image generation Apps are trained on data sets that include billions of questionable and straight up harmful data points. This includes racial imagery, child porn, Isis executions, and massive numbers of copyrighted artworks by human artists, to name a few. There are extremely serious concerns regarding privacy, and very real issues of data theft. As it stands, the reason Midjourney and DallE, etc. are able to create such incredible imagery is because they've been trained with some of the greatest artists and illustrators copyrighted works without their consent, and this has had seriously negative effects on the livelihoods of artists. Right now we don't have the necessary legislation to protect artists from harm through the use of AI image generators, and it's more important than ever for creatives to come together, learn, ask questions and speak up. I really encourage you to dive deeper into this before returning to prompting. Check out SamDoesArts, Howard Wimshurt and Proko and what they have to say to start, or really any artist you admire, on YouTube. Definitely look into the work being done by the Concept Artists Association and Karla Ortiz, also easily accessible on YouTube. Most importantly, share this information and encourage others stop to using AI generators until the responsible parties take accountability and we have the necessary measures in place to ensure this technology doesn't have more devastating effects in the future than it already has.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Insider's guide to colour blindness