Video game company stock prices dip after Google introduces an AI world-generation tool
Source: The Verge
The stock prices of some major video game companies, including Take-Two Interactive, Roblox, and Unity, had notable declines on Friday, just a day after Google announced its Project Genie tool that lets users prompt AI to generate interactive experiences, Reuters reports. Take-Twos stock price closed at $220.30 (down 7.93 percent from yesterday), Robloxs closed at $65.76 (down 13.17 percent), and Unitys closed at $29.10 (down 24.22 percent).
Other AI tools have received significant pushback from artists and creators over allegations of theft of their work to train the underlying AI models, AIs water and electricity usage, and what this means for creative output. Google DeepMinds Diego Rivas told The Verge that Genie 3, the AI world model powering Project Genie, was trained primarily on publicly available data from the web, and a whitepaper from Google DeepMind researchers about the first Genie model said that it was trained from a large dataset of over 200,000 hours of publicly available Internet gaming videos.
Many game developers are already very skeptical of generative AI and its hand in seemingly ripping off existing works to let people create AI slop. The Super Mario and The Legend of Zelda-like worlds I was able to create from prompts with Project Genie somewhat resembled Nintendos actual games, but the experiences didnt have any of the fun or playability of the originals. For an industry already grappling with wave after wave after wave of layoffs, even the current form of Project Genie represents a pitch to replace work like testing and concept building.
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But the push by investors and executives for AI game creation tools is already being spelled out. xAI CEO Elon Musk has promised Real-time, high-quality shows and video games at scale, customized to the individual, next year. Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney said Friday that Well see constant leapfrogging between engine centric AI and world model centric AI until they come together for maximum effect. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg went long on the companys earnings call this week about how AI will help games feel more immersive and interactive, making his comments just a couple of weeks after shutting down VR game studios and projects.
Read more: https://www.theverge.com/games/871348/google-project-genie-take-two-roblox-unity
If the game companies thought the AI bros would just be offering them tools to automate, they underestimated how greedy they are.
Having stolen all that intellectual property, the AI bros want to use it to take over arts and entertainment.
And they did steal it. Google talks about "publicly available" data - but "publicly available" is NOT the same thing as "public domain." So you can bet most of what they used that they found online was copyrighted work they had no right to train their AI on. And their saying their AI was trained only "primarily" with what they scraped online means a large amount of what they trained it on, possibly close to half, was not available anywhere online, and they still got it even though there's no indication they paid for any of it.
Multichromatic
(48 posts)What A.I. can come up with now is complete garbage. This generative A.I. game demo is is an example of what tech bros think future A.I. games will look like. So, some kind of bizarre disjointed Salvador Dali fever dream.
I'm disgusted by greedy, stupid, lazy, tech bros thinking they can fire everyone and have A.I. build software or games for their company. Then, somehow, magically, they will all become rich billionaires
https://m.youtube.com/shorts/gR1eR8AQSgI
https://www.pcgamer.com/gaming-industry/tech-investor-declares-ai-games-are-going-to-be-amazing-posts-an-ai-generated-demo-of-a-god-awful-shooter-as-proof/