46 pointsby ZeljkoS7 hours ago22 comments
  • BlackFly5 hours ago
    Rarely do people get the right takeaway from this effect. Take a normal bottle of red wine and some top tier, swap them around so the ordinary is in the expensive bottle and vice versa. Serve them. People prefer the ordinary wine in the expensive bottle.

    Bad takeaway: taste is meaningless.

    Good takeaway: qualia depends on many contextual cues beyond the obvious.

    Part of the appreciation of Monet is the fact that it was made by Monet. The art pieces 4′33″ or Black Square are early examples of this within the are world. Many pieces will have you saying, my 8 year old could have done this, so why is this piece famous? Critiques and appreciation are often not literal because we cannot properly express these subconscious effects.

    • lukko5 hours ago
      Exactly - context is everything in art, in how it's experienced and how it is created.

      I think it's important to note that a jpg of Monet is not fully experiencing the painting in any sense. Colours will not be accurately captured, the texture, the framing, the scale - it's sort of like getting a heavily watered down version of the expensive wine, saying it's cheap wine, and asking what people think.

      • unparagoned2 hours ago
        I feel really sorry for people that find context is key for art.

        For them often context is more important than the actual art. Lie about the context and their view of art changes completely. I would say these people have objectively bad taste in art. These are the worst kinds of people.

        In respect to your point about jpeg, you could have had a jpeg marked as real and one ai, and you would have had all the same comments about how the real jpeg was much better for all kinds of reasons. There is going to be almost zero chance anyone commented how they did due to it being a JPEG, vs them thinking it was ai.

      • aworks2 hours ago
        This is why John Cage's 4'33" mentioned above is genius. If you listen to the composition with sincerity and seriousness, you get the full, unadulterated (non-silent) experience as opposed to an interpretation.
      • kergonath5 hours ago
        > Colours will not be accurately captured

        Even looking at the real thing, as most pigments degrade with age. There is no way of experiencing it as it was painted.

      • surgical_fire4 hours ago
        This reminds me the day I went to see in person Starry Night Over The Rhone.

        I am not exactly an art person, but I once was explained why that painting is a big deal, the whole impasto thing, etc.

        I get there and there's an horde of morons taking selfies next to the painting, and another horde of morons taking photos of the painting. I just wanted to observe a bit the depth of the carved layers of ink and how light reflected on them.

        Why bother taking a photo when I can find professional high definition photos of it online?

        In the end I was unable to observe anything. It was sort of a let down, and the experience made me hate people a wee bit more than before. Nobody wanted to fucking look at the painting.

        • etrautmann4 hours ago
          I love deeply observing paintings and also love taking a photo while in a museum. It helps me remember the details and review like spaced repetition the things I saw, or spend more time observing nuance later. Are many people ticking boxes? Probably, but the issue is the too many people. Even with people just looking, I feel uncomfortable spending time if there’s a line.
    • andybak5 hours ago
      Yes and no. Whilst I agree with your broad point, the point being made here is largely that the people dumping on the "AI" Monet are claiming objectivity about their opinions. And in many cases claiming that it's obvious to anyone with an eye for such things.
    • wongarsu5 hours ago
      I suspect this particular painting wouldn't do particularly well anytime you remove the framing of "this is a genuine Monet". It's not one of Monet's best. Monet would almost certainly agree.

      Some of the comments reflect this, critiquing the art for what it is, not for who it is from. But at the same time a lot of them clearly go in with the mindset that they don't like it, then try to rationalize that with art critique.

      • pwillia74 hours ago
        I heard about an experiment on some podcast where they switched organ donation to opt-in from opt-out and before and after the change they interviewed people coming out of the DMV and asked them _why_ they chose to or chose not to be an organ donor.

        No one said -- Oh that's just what the default option was.

        Everyone had a thought out reasoned answer why they did what they did. But the data showed none of them did that and they in fact just did what the default was and justified their choice afterwards.

        I wish I could remember/find the podcast but I haven't been able to. It feels like an old freakonomics but I don't think it is.

    • amelius4 hours ago
      Your comment reminded me of this urban legend:

      https://sciencesnopes.blogspot.com/2013/05/about-that-wine-e...

    • nayroclade4 hours ago
      The point is that "part" of the appreciation appears here to be all of the appreciation.

      Yes, the context of who created a piece of art will have an affect on how you interpret it. But if the question of who/what created it can literally flip your interpretation between "it's genius" and "it's garbage", then that's the only thing you care about. All the actual characteristics of the thing itself are irrelevant. And if literally the only thing that matters about art is who created it, what exactly is the point of art?

    • 62746736 minutes ago
      The takeaway i see here is you attach "AI" to anything and people automatically go into AI-yuk mode.

      It's mindless tribalism/wokism in different form.

    • madaxe_again5 hours ago
      I think far closer is “people want to be part of the in-group”.

      Closer yet is “look at me! I am sexy and cool! Have sex with me!”.

      “Taste” is social signalling, end to end, so strike me down.

      I say this as someone who gets writeups of their work in design magazines fairly often - and I am not a designer - it’s just like dressing a theatre set with the correct objects to signal the thing you want to signal.

      Fuck, I fed people cat food at a dinner party when I was 20 and they all said it was delicious pâté.

      All artifice.

  • futune5 hours ago
    Are the comments real?

    I guess this is kind of the recursive version of the purported phenomenon, but, are we sure all those comments aren't just bot generated outrage so people can have big engagement by feeling superiour or whatever?

  • harel5 hours ago
    People want importance. To feel, or more accurately, to show that they "Know". That they "Care". They are experts in this or that. They are this, they are that. Whatever it is they are "selling" or to whichever group they want to belong to - they play that part they conceive is theirs.

    I love exercises like this - they expose this. Float it right up to the surface. It's poetic.

  • franze5 hours ago
    Last summer I created and printed out a book "Claude Code - An Autobiography" written by Claude Code. Read it on the beach during vacation.

    It was a hallucinated mess. And, not the worst book I have ever read. Entertaining.

    So, if AI would wrote the perfect book, would you read it? Or do we need to be able to relate to the creator/ author to really appreciate it? Do we need to appreciate something to enjoy it?

    • wongarsu3 hours ago
      Depends on the genre I guess?

      Ironically I think AI could potentially write great Sci-Fi. Both the "explore the interplay of society and technology by looking at a theoretical future" kind and the "look at ourselves through the lens of an outsider by moving an equivalent situation to an alien planet" kind. In fact those might benefit from the slightly outside perspective. The "Western, but in space" kind might work less well, for the same reasons a romance novel written by AI wouldn't be something I'd be interested in

      All of this assuming a quality level far above the current SotA. You could maybe approach it with current models through very careful iterative prompting, including a thorough planning phase. But on its own the reasoning part of AI is far from good enough right now

    • fellerts5 hours ago
      I'm reminded by this short story posted to HN a couple months ago: https://nearzero.software/p/warranty-void-if-regenerated

      The discussion is interesting as many people didn't catch that it was mostly written by Claude: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47431237

    • mingus884 hours ago
      It’s odd to frame it like this. How about:

      A powerful enough LLM trained on great books can output something indistinguishable to most people as a great book. Would you read it? Appreciate it?

      Sure I’d read it. At least some of it. If I knew it was AI I don’t think I’d need to finish it because I know it’s not actually an influential work that has a place in literary history.

      If I didn’t know it was AI, I’d probably read the whole thing and have funny opinions of it because by definition I probably couldn’t tell the difference.

      We are all here on the internet reading comments by bots to pass the time. It’s been that way for a long time and we all still enjoy doing it. The “quality” of what we are reading is going up but what else really changes?

    • DeathArrow5 hours ago
      >So, if AI would wrote the perfect book

      There is no perfect book.

      If it was a technical book, I would read it, I don't see why not.

      But if supposedly AI wrote a good novel, I wouldn't read it probably, because I am interested in how humans are creative, not the AI. But I wouldn't probably declare the book as junk, either.

  • tasuki6 hours ago
    Ah, this warms my heart. Now if only the people who were at first so willing to participate in this experiment engaged in more self-reflection and less rage...
  • SyntaxErrorist5 hours ago
    People were not judging the painting in isolation, they were judging the story attached to it. Once they heard AI every brushstroke became suspicious.
    • kergonath5 hours ago
      Even without hearing it. Just look at how often people throw "AI slop" around to disparage comments they don’t like here, and the list of bullshit "tells" that supposedly identify AI posts. The simple fact that what they see could have been made by a LLM pushes some people to be cynical, worse versions of themselves.
  • ajdude4 hours ago
    Original source is [dup] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48134400

    Albeit the original source was flagged.

  • lz4005 hours ago
    It could be the painting is real and those comments were written by AI
  • frankohn5 hours ago
    When judging art, like when judging wine, there is very little objectivity: people have some expectations and preconcepts about what is good and what is bad and they emit their judgement mostly based on their preconcepts. In this case they have been "primed" (this is a real psychology concept) that it was AI and they invented a lot of reasons to explain why that was bad AI slop, but that happened just because they where "primed" on AI. If the post was about a lost, wonderful Monet, found for the first time the comments would have been about how typical Monet it was and how beautiful the choice of colors and the water reflects or whatever.

    This is also seen when blind-tasting wines when prestigious "grands crus" are classed as bad whereas humble, mostly unknown, wines gets great appreciations. When people say that a wine is "great" or "extraordinary" is mostly because they have been primed to think it must be extraordinary, because of the name, the presentation, the prestige etc.

    This problem is always true in the domains like art and philosophy where there is no ground truth and everyone can say very much what they want and it can be never be proved wrong neither right. Actually, in philosophy, all the branches that developed to be grounded on facts and ground truth have been given a different name and separated from philosophy so what remains in philosophy is just the empty words.

    People are much more humble when they are asked about an hard-science question or judgement.

    I am also having fun about all the hate about AI that people express, this is almost comical. You can almost literally see their little ego that feels menaced by the AI and they react based on fear and anger. Of course this doesn't mean there aren't real problems about AI use but the way people react irrationally is just fun to observe.

  • mayliu20007 hours ago
    We didn't get worse at judging art. We just got better at doubting everything.
    • lifeisstillgood5 hours ago
      I think that might be most insightful comment here (even including mine!)
    • cyanydeez6 hours ago
      Art isn't special, as far as I can tell, it's just a shared cultural perception.

      This social experiment is a double edge sword. Both the critics of AI art and AI art enthusiasts are playing a primarily cultural game that can't be satisified by mere inspection of the work itself.

      The same way the "white supremacists" aren't identifiable by their skin color.

      • joe_mamba6 hours ago
        >Art isn't special, as far as I can tell, it's just a shared cultural perception.

        This. The Mona Lisa didn't get famous until it got stolen. Famous paintings are just 3D NFTs for the wealthy elite, doesn't mean they're more beautiful than paintings made by noname authors.

        • lifeisstillgood5 hours ago
          The Mona Lisa was famous before the 20th C because da Vinci carried it around for 20 years saying “this is the greatest painting I have ever done”. That kept it famous for 500 years. It then gained modern new media celebrity by getting nicked (and because the person who stole it did not do it for cash but because he thought it was the greatest painting ever)

          So it’s hard for people to judge brilliance themselves, but we can rely on other peoples judgement if enough people follow the crowd or put enough passion in. (Not saying that makes it right - science is not a democracy, but it’s a great heuristic for 8 billion people)

          • applfanboysbgon5 hours ago
            Yeah, but da Vinci's art sucks. It was good for its time, when the entire world population was 400m and literally 90% of those people were farmers and only the very well-to-do had the time and resources to practice a non-practical craft. Now we have a population of 8 billion, everyone has access to incredible art tools for a fraction of a month's minimum wage, there is an absolute wealth of information including books and in-depth video tutorials for everyone to learn from, and countless millions of people have time to try their hand at art. The quality of art produced today absolutely blows away the Mona Lisa, which might as well be garbage. The only reason people pretend to like it and most of the rest of the 'fine art' is an emperor has no clothes schtick, a sort of snobby social game where everyone has to act like it's so special and good because that makes you cultured, even though there are literally millions of art pieces produced today of vastly superior quality but which are not famous.
            • kergonath5 hours ago
              > The quality of art produced today absolutely blows away the Mona Lisa

              I don’t like the Mona Lisa, but this is shortsighted. I agree that more people would tend to generate more instances of good art, it has nothing to do with the tools or the technical aspects. The point of art is beauty and emotion. Better tools do not always help and in fact modern art is often famously opaque and inaccessible.

              > The only reason people pretend to like it and most of the rest of the 'fine art' is an emperor has no clothes schtick, a sort of snobby cultural pressure where everyone has to act like it's so special and good because that makes you cultured

              It’s all subjective. People liking something you don’t does not make them brainwashed, and it does not make you better.

              If you are genuinely interested in this, you could have a read at this https://dynomight.net/bourdieu/ . It’s a bit more subtle than you say.

              • applfanboysbgon4 hours ago
                > The point of art is beauty and emotion

                I feel nothing when I look at the Mona Lisa, and even accounting for subjectivity, I would honestly be surprised if very many do. You can get an art snob to wax poetic with fifteen paragraphs about what emotions it's meant to convey in you, or alternatively, you could just look at good art produced today which evokes emotions on its own merit, without needing somebody to tell you why and what emotions it's supposed to evoke in you.

                > People liking something you don’t does not make them brainwashed

                It very much does when you get to the points of comical absurdity like this bullshit[1] and that bullshit[2]. Once people are committed to the social status game of art snobbery, they have to take it further and further, justifying the artistic merit of increasingly meritless 'art', lest they reveal their snobbery was fake all along, and then you have a blank fucking canvas selling for millions. It's not even that people like something I don't, but rather that the idea they actually like it at all is a charade.

                [1]https://nypost.com/2024/12/03/lifestyle/blank-pure-white-art... [2]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No._5,_1948

                ---

                Skimming the article you linked, I don't think it's in contention with what I'm saying? It essentially points out that "taste" is not about actually liking something, but responding to social incentives, which is exactly what I mean by a social status game.

            • 4ndrewl4 hours ago
              The only reason people write comments like this is because they've unconsciously normalised the contrarian/rage/emotionally-charged-comment economy.

              They clearly don't really mean what they write and to suggest that "everyone" has access to incredible art tools in a world where millions don't even have reliable access to clean water is trite.

              • applfanboysbgon4 hours ago
                Yeah, yeah, Africa exists. The vast, vast majority of people in the societies I've lived in can afford a $100 tablet, though. Even the very poor, of which I was growing up. I didn't have air conditioning or working plumbing for years of my life but I still had access to art tools.

                I'd also suggest your comment is rather more contrarian than mine. I laid out logical reasoning at length for my beliefs. You mostly gainsayed my comment, engaging with only one tiny pedantic point and otherwise ignoring what I said to instead insult me.

  • happytoexplain3 hours ago
    1. AI can now be indistinguishable from reality in many cases.

    2. Many people hate AI art, not just when it looks bad, but also conceptually.

    3. Perception is very easily influenced by many factors.

    So given those three facts, this outcome is obvious (and yes, it's cherry-picked, but I'm referring to the big picture), and I'm not sure why I don't see this a lot more often as a form of trolling or dishonest "evidence" that disliking AI art is a bad thing - maybe I'm too pessimistic.

  • xnx4 hours ago
    People are really eating up this engagement bait. This is getting reposted everywhere.
  • kergonath5 hours ago
    > “I’m no artist but a real Monet actually looks like a real place…”

    Some people have no clue about the concept of Impressionism.

  • lifeisstillgood5 hours ago
    But this is why we have “experts”. It’s like the guy playing a Stradivarius on the NYC subway. Most people can’t distinguish ok from brilliant, in a subject they don’t understand. Most humans cannot distinguish slop code from decent code but I assume most HNers can. However I can’t tell you why one electrical wiring job is better than another unless it looks untidy.

    Once you get passed a minimum level of decent we have to rely on experts and the communal agreement of experts to decide. Sometimes that easy (is the electrical wiring on fire) sometimes it’s much harder. (Insert controversial wiring discussion here)

    I suspect The same applies here.

    • smallnix5 hours ago
      But why do we have to rely on experts to experience 'proper' art?

      My naive thought was, that Art is not like a bridge, which would collapse if built by amateur's.

      But perhaps art has effects on us which are beneficial and these would actually 'collapse'.

      • lifeisstillgood5 hours ago
        We don’t need to rely on experts to experience art - I think that is a fundamental part of art- within the limits similar to free speech, anything is art. (But don’t block rush hour traffic with your interpretive dance troupe)

        Is a painting by AI art? Sure

        Is a painting by Monet better than one painted by me? Most people would say yes.

        Can some people explain why? Yes. They are not “experts” in the same way the Oxford Professor of nuclear physics is an expert but it is on the same scale.

        Or possibly I am just hallucinating the argument because you prompted me to…

      • dgellow5 hours ago
        Experts can help frame and understand an art piece. They can provide information regarding the craft, how the piece fits with other work from that time, what were the cultural influences, how the life of the artist influenced the work, etc. but you never had to rely on experts to experience or identify what proper art is. However at the end of the day art is a social concept, it’s something we negotiate between us, humans, and people are attracted to what they believe is considered good and important by others
        • lifeisstillgood5 hours ago
          Thanks … nicely put

          That helps me frame the experts vs science idea.

          Science is just the parts that evidence does not disprove.

          Expertise is understanding how the various explanations we have with science fits together, framing it as it were, and using that understanding to make sensible directional choices. Of course those predictions may later be proven wrong (light is a wave, waves need mediums, ether must exist) but they are more likely than guessing

    • smitty1e5 hours ago
      The wiring point is more subtle than that.

      Consider the domestic power panel and wiring that is perfectly acceptable, but would 'splode outright if you moved it to an industrial setting and put it under an enterprise load.

      Context matters.

  • sambapa6 hours ago
    Plot twist: critics are bots (just like me)
    • bitlax4 hours ago
      Plot twist: Monet is actually garbage
  • saaaaaam6 hours ago
    “One person even took the time to write out an 850-word breakdown of the AI work’s shortcomings.”

    But they didn’t. The “breakdown” they link to is clearly and glaringly AI-authored.

    “ Fair warning before I dig in: this image is actually a very competent rendition. It's doing more right than most AI Monet pastiches. But you asked what makes it inferior to a real Monet, so here's the honest breakdown. What's missing — the physical object”

    Plus the whole piece is just “someone did something and now here are a bunch of tweets”.

    What an utterly pointless piece of churnalism.

  • DeathArrow5 hours ago
    As always in life, prejudices and biases are much more powerful than the objective truth for a vast amount of people.

    We can see every day.

  • throw3108226 hours ago
    I love how people hallucinate all sorts of bs when given the right prompt.
    • jml785 hours ago
      Personally, I always found it interesting that people called it hallucinations.

      I have two kids. My youngest is a person who everyone has met. Yes, I am trying to work on this shit with him but people would say he is one of those people who is confidently incorrect.

      My youngest will just bullshit through any topic and a lot of the time he thinks he is correct.

      I personally think just stating shit as fact when you have no idea is a common issue with NNs.

      Drives me crazy because both my kids have heard me say, “I don’t know, we will have to go look it up” more than I have an answer. Because I don’t do it. But fuck if my youngest won’t just make shit up instead of saying he doesn’t know.

      LLMs are asked a question so they are gonna give you an answer just like many humans whether they have a clue about what they are talking about or not

    • twolegs5 hours ago
      [dead]
  • Ozzie-D5 hours ago
    [dead]
  • 3qk1ashg4 hours ago
    That only tells us that pro-AI people lie to elicit the desired responses on Twitter. Since lying is their default mode, this is not surprising.

    If you tell the neighborhood that the new guy who moves in is a criminal, virtually all people will believe it as well and not use their own judgement.

    Of course on Twitter there won't be any art critics, perhaps the responses are all AI bots.