I am dreading the same things that you are experiencing,
@Sc0ut - robots replacing artists, and people thinking artists are obsolete!
As for using existing art as references for new art, though, I'm sorry, Sc0ut - artists have been doing that forever. Art students throughout history have been encouraged to outright copy the old masters for centuries, and the masters (living or not) didn't receive any residual income when their work inspired other work. Copyright law is a slightly complex can of worms that I won't open right now, but I will say there is nothing illegal (that I know of) about viewing art and using it as material for new art. There's even some latitude for appropriating pieces of an artwork - like sampling music - and making new art with a mixture of the pieces.
The big difference for me is that I don't feel any obligation to educate a machine to do art better. Maybe I'll feel differently later; if I start using AI for what I believe to be its strength - generating a lot of OK ideas quickly - maybe I'll want that idea generator to get smarter.
But right now, any artwork that I have posted online is designated "Don't look at me" as far as machine learning is concerned. Sites like ArtStation and others have lately built that function into their services - you can "opt out" of letting your art be scraped and used by AI.
I am also a "working artist" - a designer-turned-art-director at an advertising agency, and I offer this as words of comfort, hopefully: Artists have often had to "defend" and justify to the public why their art should be appreciated, so this latest challenge is not completely new. They must simply defend the need for human creativity
on top of art started with AI.
Because right now that's the big difference, right? AI can re-interpret from source material, but can't create anything new. If machine learning had existed at the beginning of the 20th century, then robots could have made thousands of images like this:
But the robots would NEVER have come up with something like this:
It took people like Picasso and Braque to ask: "What if we jumped with both feet into abstraction?"
and then had the gall to put their work into the world for consideration as art. Courage, contrariness, and the will to ask "what if?" are still human traits that robots don't have.
Hopefully some of these thoughts will help you,
@Sc0ut , to answer those people who tell you a human artist isn't necessary anymore!