[–] [deleted] 1 point 2 points (+3|-1) ago 

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[–] FriedFood100 0 points 5 points (+5|-0) ago 

No, humans long for shared experience. I listen to live music/recordings all the time because I like raw/organic/unrefined human experiences. I like electronic music, but it doesn't move me as much as when I hear a human orchestra play, and no a robot orchestra wouldn't be the same. They've had automated pianos that do that for years, I don't really care for them. I'm not going to pay much for fine dining facilitated by robots, but I will if it's facilitated by humans. etc. etc.

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[–] rwbj 0 points 1 point (+1|-0) ago  (edited ago)

Tangential but AIs are also composing orchestras

That was from 4 years ago. So far as I know this is not a very active field of research (compared to for instance something like computer vision, natural language processing, etc) but it's a decent proof of concept. I agree and think that human shared experiences will, and I think within our lives, become the keystone of human activity. There will always be people that want to teach, want to produce creative works, and so on. But as automation begins to take care of the mundane, these occupations will be voluntary - and you'll have a larger potential audience than ever before.

edit Hahaha. Speaking of fine dining. Can you imagine the quality of nearly any experience if the people working at said establishment actually wanted to be doing that job? They're going to take pride and effort in what they do and believe they're being fairly compensated for such. In many ways I think that in many ways is a more defining part of the experience of fine dining than the food itself. When people enjoy what they do it translates to a better product and better experience for you.

[–] [deleted] 0 points 3 points (+3|-0) ago 

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[–] 4868329? 0 points 4 points (+4|-0) ago 

Of an existing work and tries to pass it off as an original. Painting a derivative in the style of someone and selling it as your own is fine.