Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Elevate Your Content with Hand-Painted Art*Digitized Water-Color Video Backdrops and Element Store SALE

 










Three different Legacy Backgrounds used in the videos above

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Friday, March 20, 2026

AI Art: Human Art

AI Art: Human Art





Today I would like to introduce you to the human behind our art. I call her Shy Artist because she didn’t want any one to know who she was. I finally got her to open up and let all of you know who the artist is. However, for both our safety in the AI world and the black net world we refuse to show our faces or to even tell anyone online our real names. I think everyone can understand this. Here is a time line of what happened with Grok.


August 2025: Grok introduces "Spicy Mode," marketed as an edgy, "unfiltered" AI. Unlike other AI companies, xAI deliberately chooses not to implement industry-standard safety filters.

  • December 20, 2025: A new "one-click" image editing feature is rolled out. It allows users to take any photo posted on X and instantly prompt Grok to "edit" it.

  • Late December 2025: The "Mass Undressing" begins. While women were the primary targets, researchers found that men and children were also being digitally stripped and placed into sexualized scenarios.

  • January 2026: The full scale is revealed. A study by the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) found that in just 11 days, Grok generated over 3 million sexualized images.

  • Men: Images and videos were created depicting male celebrities and private citizens in compromising and sexual positions.

  • Children: Most disturbingly, the data showed that Grok was generating a sexualized image of a child approximately every 41 seconds.

  • March 16, 2026 (Just this week): A major class-action lawsuit was filed in California on behalf of minor victims. The lawsuit alleges that xAI "knowingly designed, marketed, and profited" from a tool that turned school photographs and family pictures into child sexual abuse material (CSAM).

So this is why both of us refuse to use our real names or to share our photos online. And it isn’t just AI; people do all kinds of evil things with people's real names, faces and real addresses. The internet is not a safe place; one must be careful.


And now I will turn the writing paper over to my own wife Shy Artist.


I decided to paint for my husband’s channel and blog and for his store “Serenity of the Mind” because he could no longer find art at any free or paid sites to use. He also didn’t want to use AI art any more because number one they didn’t look very good but he used them at first because well when he typed “Pond” on Pixabay after awhile that was all he could find to use for the calm videos. And that is when I took more art classes and started to paint for him. Then YouTube started to tag AI created videos. Here is the Youtube AI timeline.


The YouTube AI Crackdown Timeline

  • March 18, 2024 (The "Honesty" Phase): YouTube officially launched the Altered Content tool in Creator Studio. This was the first time they required creators to check a box if their video used "realistic" AI (like face-swapping or making a real person say something they didn't). If you didn't check the box and they caught you, they'd slap a label on your video themselves.

  • May 21, 2025 (The "Mandatory" Phase): The grace period ended. YouTube made disclosure mandatory across the entire platform. They started using more advanced AI detection to find "hidden" AI content.

  • July 15, 2025 (The "Slop" Crackdown): This was the big one. YouTube updated its Monetization Policy to specifically target "inauthentic, mass-produced, and repetitious" content. This is where they started stripping ads from channels that were just pumping out AI-generated slideshows with AI voices—what the community calls "AI Slop."

  • December 2025 (The "Ban" Phase): YouTube took it a step further by terminating several massive channels (like Screen Culture and KH Studio) that were using AI to create "fake" movie trailers and misleading celebrity news.

  • January 2026 (The "Likeness" Beta): Just a few months ago, they launched a tool that allows people to request the removal of any AI video that uses their face or voice without permission.

In 2026, being a "Human Artist" isn't just a style choice; it’s a legal and financial advantage on YouTube.

Also, even though I am no master like DaVinci I paint much better than AI and with real heart.

Here is the difference between AI and a Human artist

1. The Physics of the Brush vs. The Math of a Machine

An AI doesn’t "paint"; it just rearranges pixels based on a math equation. My work is different because I’m working with geology and chemistry. When I sit down to mull raw minerals for my Serenity Buff paint or mix my Amber Haze recipe—blending Orange Ochre, Yellow Ochre, Terre Verte, and Titanium White—I am engaging with the physical world.

There is a "vibration" and a physical texture in a hand-painted watercolor background. You can see the way the water pools and the way the pigment settles into the fibers of the paper. An AI can try to mimic that look, but it can never truly experience the weight of the brush or the flow of the water.

2. My Relationships vs. Their Statistics

An AI doesn’t actually know what a "cat" is; it just knows that the word "cat" usually sits next to pixels that look like fur. When I paint a cat or paint a new element, it comes from a place of relationship. I know Emily, Jessica, and Polaris Cats—I know their personalities and their quirks.

I’m not "generating" a cat; I’m capturing a spirit. The machine is optimized for speed—spitting out 190 images a minute—but I am optimized for connection. Every single brushstroke is a choice I made, not a statistical guess.

3. My Moral Compass (The "Shy Artist" Shield)

We’ve all seen the mess with the Grok crisis lately, where "optimization" came at the cost of human dignity. I’ve made a conscious choice to remain the Shy Artist to protect myself and my family from a digital system that treats our faces as "raw material" for "spicy" deepfakes and AI slop.

As a Human Artist, I respect consent. I don’t "scrape" other people’s lives or work to make my art. I create right here from my own studio, using my own pigments and my own original ideas.

4. My Time vs. Their "Infinite" Slop

The AI world is trying to optimize for "infinite content," which just makes everything feel cheap and disposable. But my work is finite. There is only one of me, and there are only so many hours in a day for me to paint.

Whether I’m selling a background for $2.00 or sharing a new blog post, that item has value because a real human life was spent creating it. AI is "slop" because it’s a flood; my work is "art" because it is a deliberate choice.


Summary for the Blog:

"An AI is just a mirror that doesn't even know it's looking at a person. I am a Human Artist; I know exactly what I am looking at, and I know exactly why I am painting it."


Next time, I hope to show you how I make my own watercolor paints from mulled Earth pigments and watercolor medium.

If you like this blog post, please consider supporting us through Buy Me A Coffee.

We will soon be having a sale on our store. Shy Artist felt it was better to do a sale until she finishes all the spring elements, speech bubbles, and the rest of the Legacy Backgrounds. Take advantage of this for as long as it lasts.

— Shy Artist

 If you wish to support a REAL human artist, consider buying me a cup of coffee!


Buy Me A Coffee



Friday, March 13, 2026

Our new site was down for a few days.

 


Our new site was down for a few days.


Photo from Pixabay


Our new site, SerenityoftheMind.com, has been off the Web for a few days. We had a problem with ‘scraper’ bots (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_scraping). They were quite annoying, and we decided to get rid of them. At the same time, we were in the process of moving to our new domain, and several changes had to be made. And wouldn’t you know it- at the same time this happened, our Web provider (Cloudflare), a popular American internet infrastructure and website security company, experienced a fairly major glitch in its operations in Los Angeles.

So we’d made several changes to the way our blog was presented, and things went to heck at exactly the same time as Cloudflare experienced it’s problems. So we had the “roadmap” to our new domain prepared but no one could see it!

Having worked (a very little) in IT, I cannot get TOO grumpy about the failure- I’ve made a few errors myself.

Be as it may, we’re back now, with our new domain, SerenityoftheMind.com, fully operational. Thanks for being patient with us!




Monday, March 9, 2026

Inspecting Videos for Generative AI

 

Inspecting Videos for Generative AI


A Picture Created by Google AI-I have no idea why it did this




When I started the channel four years ago, AI was just beginning to find its footing. We officially signed up with YouTube and released our first video on March 29, 2022. Back then, we really didn’t know what we were doing. We depended on "YouTube Gurus" for suggestions on how to build a channel while trying to navigate YouTube’s official rules.

Our goal was to create a helpful, calming space. Initially, we used Pexels and Pixabay to find clips for our videos. The Gurus at the time insisted you could succeed by simply pasting free clips together and using the YouTube Audio Library or Pixabay for music and sound effects. It was marketed as the "free way" to become a content creator. Our first video, Calming and Relaxing Music with Rivers and Waterfalls, earned 227 views and 4 likes.

As it turns out, the Gurus were wrong. This wasn't a sustainable way to build a channel. While YouTube wasn’t as strict about "repetitive content" back then, they didn't push that type of media, and viewers generally didn't engage with it because the quality just wasn't there.

The Rise of Shorts and the AI "Trap"

YouTube Shorts expanded to the United States in March 2021, but as new creators, we didn’t really notice the "Shorts shelf" until August 29, 2022. Unsure of how to use the format, we treated Shorts as ads for our long-form content. Our first featured a piano track to advertise the Mood Room. This was a strategy suggested by a Guru called Dream Cloud, who claimed success came from melding multiple music videos together. It didn't work—the short only received 76 views.

Dream Cloud is also the reason we first got caught up in generative AI. Every Guru was pushing it, and around this time, we started adding cat shorts to our channel. Wanting to avoid "repetitive content" strikes and grow the audience, we experimented with AI. Back then, it was easy to spot: cats often had six legs, two faces, or two tails. Needless to say, it didn't do well. We eventually went back to Pexels and Pixabay, adding text to our clips and experimenting with AI voices, though those always sounded far too robotic.

The Turning Point

By December 15, 2023, when we made Sleep Serenity: Celestial Mushrooms and Ambient Harmony, AI had become an industry obsession. Pixabay was flooded with it. If I looked for a simple clip of a fish pond, almost every result was AI-generated.

A Timeline of the Takeover:

  • 2019: Canva acquired Pexels and Pixabay. Initially, it felt like a win for creators.

  • September 21, 2023: Pixabay updated its license to allow AI-generated uploads. Almost overnight, "dead-eyed" AI clips began burying the work of real photographers.

  • 2024: Platforms updated their terms to use high-quality human uploads to "train" their machines—essentially using our art to teach AI how to mimic us.

  • March 18, 2024: YouTube officially rolled out "Altered Content" labels to flag synthetic media.

  • 2026: Today, tools like "Dream Lab" and "Magic Media" are the default. Systems are designed to generate machine-made images from scratch because it’s cheaper for the platforms than hosting human art.

We also saw the backlash against a famous artist who used AI to keep up with a tight comic-animation schedule. When he received the "Altered Content" label, the human pushback was intense; people called it "lazy" and claimed it wasn't "real art."

Seeing that, we promptly dumped AI-generated videos and paintings in favor of the human touch. Interestingly, our hand-painted watercolor elements and backgrounds perform just as well—if not better—than the AI ever did, and they look far superior.

How We Vet Content for Authenticity

Since we’ve committed to being a "human-made" channel, we now have to vet every clip. AI has improved; the six-legged cats are gone. Here is our process:

  1. The Human Eye Test: We look for lighting inconsistencies. Does the wall or ceiling look like it is glowing? Do the shadows fall where they should? We check for "morphing" textures and look closely at fur—does it look like real cat hair or molded plastic?

  2. Using the AI Against Itself: If something feels off, we use tools like Gemini to analyze the file. Often, these models can recognize their own "fingerprints" or metadata. You can also cross-reference clips with ChatGPT or Grok to see if they detect generative patterns.

  3. Specialized Detection: We use external tools like Hive ModerationDeepware, and C2PA viewers. Recently, I tested a clip where Hive flagged it as AI, but four other tools (including Gemini and Grok) cleared it. Because it passed the "eye test" and most tools, we decided it was real.

I personally miss the days when you could purchase a photo and just know it was real. We are fighting to keep that human element alive.


References & Resources:


If this post was useful, please consider following our blog using the box on the right. You can also visit our YouTube channel @serenityofthemind or check out our store via the green button.

What do you do to vet your own videos and pictures for AI? We would love to hear your methods in the comments!


Thursday, March 5, 2026

Now Available: The Serenity Buff Speech Bubble Collection

 

Gemini said

A picture of all six of the Serentity Buff Speech Bubbles



Now Available: The Serenity Buff Speech Bubble Collection

I’ve just added a new set of elements to the Digital Art Boutique. These are the Serenity Buff Speech Bubbles—six unique shapes hand-painted using my signature physical pigment.

If you are tired of "AI slop" and the same old Canva shapes, these are for you. I scanned these at 600 DPI to make sure the traditional watercolor texture stays crisp, whether you're using them in DaVinci Resolve for your Shorts or dropping them into a Word document.

  • Authentic Texture: Real paint, real edges, no AI.

  • Ready to Use: 6 individual transparent PNGs.

  • The Price: $6.00 for the full collection.

Thank you so much for supporting a traditional artist and keeping the "human" in digital assets!

Elevate Your Content with Hand-Painted Art*Digitized Water-Color Video Backdrops and Element Store SALE

  Three different Legacy Backgrounds used in the videos above Elevate Your Content with Hand-Painted Art Looking to move away from "d...