Thanks for the clarification. It's hard to tell nowadays.
My argument only pertains to the current instances of Ghibli art being used as filters. Not tangential cases on how a skilled craftsman would use AI, because that's not what's happening here.
Yeah, but I was replying to the point made in the blog post that this tool would lead to "everything starts feeling and looking the same" and "quality gets lost in quantity", as the author put it.
Wrote it myself.
Thanks for the clarification. It's hard to tell nowadays.
My argument only pertains to the current instances of Ghibli art being used as filters. Not tangential cases on how a skilled craftsman would use AI, because that's not what's happening here.
Yeah, but I was replying to the point made in the blog post that this tool would lead to "everything starts feeling and looking the same" and "quality gets lost in quantity", as the author put it.