I’m guessing Cara’s stance against AI art is a big attraction. I wish Pinterest had a filter for AI. Went searching for a topic and expected art and photography; got 80% AI images. ā˜¹ļø

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

The quality I am seeing on Cara is really nice so far. There’s an interesting scenario which could unfold where by building a community of ā€œverifiedā€ human artists we are able to more easily see the value of an individual artists work vs the averaging of all art using AI. It could elevate the value of human art.

It’ll be interesting to see if non-artists go to Cara. An artist-based community is great, though non-artists or hobby artists are usually the audience needed for sales of art and/or classes, meet-me-at-this-event announcements, join my art challenge, sign up for my newsletter, etc.

If Cara is just artists, then I think it’s more social time than helps-my-art-business time spent there. My impression is a lot of those who make a living with their art need/use social media for their business, which means the platform has to have the right potential audience or it’s not worth the artist’s time and effort.

Yeah that’s a good point. Early indications are that the Cara developers are trying to support the platform by making it a talent showcase for hiring/jobs. Definitely different from a direct to consumer or patronage model.

This is exactly an area where Nostr could shine, because you could have an app designed to be a professional showcase/portfolio for artists, and yet the same events/content could be pulled into a social apps geared toward consumers/patrons without the artist having to rebuild their social graphs separately on each app.

šŸ‘šŸ‘

Love this. Although I would argue the value of nostr in this case is not a portable social graph, it’s a portable identity attached to a modular portfolio. The people who attend your events and the people who hire you for commercial work don’t have to know each other even exists.