> At least, not enough to pay a premium for it.
Well, I'm seeing many a hobbyist use AI, and they don't have money to even pay themselves!
Before AI, I reviewed PDFs, and, imo, there's too much unnecessary art as it is. Yeah, it's pretty to look at, but it often has nothing to do with the text on the page, and, much worse, consumes ink when printed out -- and the page curls as the ink dries. The only excepts would be illustrations for a scene in an RPG scenario, or diagram for a wargame, but that's about it.
Now, as you get to moneybag corporations, yeah, that's another issue because... they have money. I remember *decades* ago about how Hollyweird writers were sued for stealing ideas from other writers. Derivative works may have laws *protecting* them, but you gotta hire lawyers to protect *you* and lawyers gotta be paid. Even if you hire an artist, if they swipe art from another artist without telling you, that may not stop a lawyer from going after you, law or no law. Settlements are a thing, and lawyers may be going after targets for the settlement because actual court costs, including time, are not worth it for the target.
AFAIK, While a human artist can claim that they were only influenced by someone else's art, AI directly relies upon art on the internet, IP-protected or not, so is closer to "swiping". Or so an entity with money may think, regardless of the law. *They* just don't think a possible lawsuit or other hassle is worth the benefit of additional AI content. And, besides, many of us humans will work on hobby content for free, with better results than a computer.