Monday, February 23, 2026

AI's impact on art and trust

AI struggles with hands. 
Microsoft Co-Pilot April 2025
One of the biggest ironies of generating something with AI, whether it is a picture, writing, animation, etc. is that the work the AI generates is considered "original". The irony about this is that AI draws from the compendium of all human knowledge and creation; it could not write if a human had not written it. It cannot create a picture if a human did not already create it. AI needs human knowledge and creation to create it's "original" works. So what is AI's impact on artwork? A local family friend, who works as a graphic artist, called yesterday and said he can't find work. He's told he's over-qualified, or too old (they don't say that but a lot of employers do discriminate based on age. Why hire a qualified Gen-X when you can hire a Gen-Z for less?) and the end reason for it all is that AI is taking his work. Again, a Zoomer can do similar or close to what he did for less. And this graphic artist has had some of his artwork go nationwide on products you have seen; and now AI has dried up that work. I was telling another friend today about his plight and she replied, "I hate AI art! That's all there is on social media and I'm sick of it!"

I have a couple of predictions that will be good for our graphic artist friend and for all artists - I think that there will come a market saturation point where because AI art is so mass-produced and everywhere right now, that two things will happen (eventually): 1. Human created art will be in demand again 2. Human created art will go up in value. Hopefully, he can ride this out because think about all the fields this is impacting. Acting is an art and there is now an AI actress. How do human actors feel about competing with code for paychecks? Can an AI actor win an Oscar for Best Actor? Or would an AI win for Best Graphics? 

Something else to consider is trust. How can we know something wasn't created with AI? The AI detectors marketed to teachers can be faulty. A cousin wrote a college entrance essay and did not use AI at all and the AI detector said she did. When we began working on our photo recommendations for the Coalition of Responsible Use in Genealogy (CRAIGEN.org) I heard Steve Little say something that has stuck with me since, "It will be hard to trust online family tree photos added after November 2022." This is why CRAIGEN advocates for labeling images created with AI. Most people just starting out with AI do not realize that AI does not restore a photo, it regenerates a photo. And since AI is programmed to correct things, it does ever-so-slightly. AI might straighten out a bump in their nose, the lines of in their ears, upturn the corner of their mouth, straighten their tie, etc. Sometimes the changes are glaringly noticeable like changing the color of a coat and other times, you cannot detect any changes. Technically, it is not a photo of your ancestor it has generated, it is AI's interpretation. This is why it is so important to label AI generated photos. 

No comments:

Post a Comment

The Gamechanger: Using FamilySearch Full Text AI

My FamilySearch Stats Several weeks ago, my husband asked me what I was working on. I replied that I was working on my genealogy and his res...