Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Hey, what's going on, everybody?
Chapter 2: What backlash is there against AI-generated art at Comic-Con?
Welcome to The Daily Eye Show. Today is January 22nd, 2026. With me today is Beth, Andy, and Brian. Appreciate everybody being here as they're coming into the comments. And yeah, as always, guys, let's kick off with some of the news of the day and then maybe have a little bit of a discussion afterwards.
Chapter 3: How does copyright affect AI-assisted music creation?
I know one of the interesting ones I saw come out yesterday as I was traveling. I don't have a, I don't have a whole lot of these, but one that I thought was interesting was Comic-Con AI, Comic-Con bands, AI generated art from art show following backlash from artists. And, This is one of those, saw it coming, see it coming, not surprised by this. There continues to be backlash.
There continues to be this internal fight in the arts about where AI belongs. I watched some really interesting videos on the plane yesterday, actually. I was on four planes yesterday. in a 24 hour period. But on one of my four plane flights, I was watching a really interesting video about, it was a lawyer who specializes in copyright and she is making YouTube videos, pretty smart actually.
And specifically about Suno, but just like not exactly Suno, but how all this is being figured out, where AI gets used, when it's okay. Copyright is nuts in terms of how you try to figure all that out.
Chapter 4: What are the implications of transparency versus deception in AI creative work?
How do you prove that? How do you not prove that? How do you give the evidence?
Chapter 5: What features are expected in Apple's rumored AI pin?
Right. So, you know, there continues to be this sort of war about where AI generated art belongs, doesn't belong where it should be banned. It's kind of a conundrum if you think about it. Right. It's like, what do we want? And that's not a simple question because different people want different things.
Chapter 6: How do wearables impact user interaction and design?
What matters to me may not matter to somebody who's been making art. AI or a making art their entire life, especially if they've been making a career of it. Again, I always refer back to my friends at Pixar, but, but not just them. I watched what happened 15 years ago with lighting and stuff like that. And, um, the people that were before the animators, it was whole departments.
I suppose maybe there still are, I don't really know, but like whether it was dreamworks or Pixar or these, you know, um, blue sky, which is another, uh, art it's now owned by Disney and Fox and whatever. But, um, There was tons of jobs that I think have been sort of probably narrowed down over time. And so you see something like this from Comic-Con.
And I mean, Comic-Con wants people to show up for Comic-Con. So they're going to probably bend to the will of people who are giving them backlash.
Chapter 7: What are the principles behind Claude's revised Constitution?
But what do you guys think? It's a little news story. I don't know if there's much deeper here. It's just one of many news stories that seem to be this thing. And I don't really know where we're going to land on this because... Different people are going to want different things.
And if it's something like a Comic-Con that maybe celebrates creativity and art and humanness, then yeah, AI probably deserves to be banned from that. And in other arenas, maybe that's not the answer. What do you think, Beth?
Well, Comic-Con and cons specifically make sense to me because you're really engaging with the human artist. The human artist is standing behind the table, right?
Chapter 8: How can constitutional thinking be applied to Claude Code?
So it's a little different, I think, than... Then another kind of sales format where you might have more understanding that this might be an AI art piece. It's sort of... I'm probably going to date myself here, but it's sort of like you would never expect...
in the years where people would just go and follow the Grateful Dead on tour, that you were going to go and buy a tie-dye shirt that was made by a robot. It seems like that's the kind of environment in which it is a human-to-human art exchange and trust.
And I think it's just more about labeling, too. Maybe if Comic-Con, I don't know, I wasn't there, but that's a massive, massive...
thing comic-con the original one i know there's many of them out there but the original one's what in san diego is that san fran i don't know it's in california it's in it's in la probably i love san diego because it's not in san francisco or maybe it moves maybe it moves i don't know i don't think so hey comic-con's massive i've been used to fly out there during college and we used to always make fun of them but boy we didn't know what he knew uh because uh did that thing blow up i remember comic-con from like the the old um
Triumph the Insult Company.
San Diego, Greg says.
I was right. It was wonderful. For some reason, I thought it was San Diego. Maybe I have distant memories of my buddy Jeremy and all his brothers flying out there. Anyway, thank you, Greg, for that. Anyway, we don't need to get stuck on this news thing. I just thought it was interesting.
We see this a lot, and it's about when it's defined, when it's not defined, where it belongs, where it doesn't belong. Who are the people that make the decisions? All the things, right? It's a bigger topic than just this news story, but I thought it was interesting. What did you guys find from the last day or so?
So I want to just make a quick weave off of that. You know, discussion about art and AI in art and artists, et cetera. I saw just, this is a tidbit. I just saw that there's an album that's been produced and is released that has a bunch of notable artists and their AI assisted development.
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