AI Doesn’t Need Taste – It’s Defining It

“Sure, AI can copy,” someone says. “But it can’t do taste.”

Series: AI, Taste and Culture

Key observations

  • Taste is fundamentally exposure and collective consensus, not an innate human superpower.
  • AI and design systems accelerate the formation of taste by efficiently reproducing and saturating the environment with popular aesthetics, leading to widespread homogeneity.
  • While familiarity offers usability and comfort, excessive sameness becomes 'brand kryptonite' and reduces differentiation.
  • A feedback loop is tightening where AI models trained on human-influenced data then influence human taste, making individuality an algorithmic outlier.
  • To combat the flattening effect of AI-defined taste, designers must actively seek diverse, non-algorithmic inputs and resist the comfort of consensus.