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Jonathan's avatar

Jaime this was a beautiful read. I feel like you can and should write an entire book on this topic. I don't want to fall in a reductionist view on this matter but it's hard not to see how corporations try to capitalize on "progressive" technologies to further their control on entire industries and I don't see how they eventually won't end up winning with Hatsune Miku already serving as a successful predecessor.

While I care little about Drake's personal success as a musician or businessman I don't think he or any other artist today can willingly accept this kind of technology taking over their likeness and control of their narrative as anything other than a complete monopolization of whatever they can consider as their "brand". If this technology is to become mainstream what other way is there than to use it against itself? Sort of like if banksy were to use LLM's to mass produce works based on his artwork and sell it to millionaires to then make the millionaires look like imbeciles for paying so much for something he hardly put any thought or time into.

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victor's avatar

good article, but there's something that doesn't sit right wrt your interpretation of louis armstrong's home recordings. of course armstrong was concerned with racism and minstrelsy; however, louis armstrong was one of *the* most boundary pushing artists of all time, and his use of new recording technologies -- which, i don't think a clear as a line as you think can be traced from home recording and AI -- prefigures a lot of the visionary use of splicing, DJ-ing, etc. by black producers (of all genres) in the 80s and 90s. i don't think it's entirely fair to minimize the artistic aims of armstrong's work to purely a critique of minstrelry when the legacy and complexity of jazz is already so misunderstood.

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