• KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 months ago

    we’ve been able to do this kinda shit since the days of film, it wasn’t hard, just required some clever stitching and blending.

    It’s “more accessible” I’m more concerned about shit like AI generated videos though. Those are spooky. Or also just the general accessibility of “natural bot nets” now.

  • Th4tGuyII@fedia.io
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    5 months ago

    Image manipulation has always been a thing, and there are ways to counter it…

    But we already know that a shocking amount of people will simply take what they see at face value, even if it does look suspicious. The volume of AI generated misinformation online is already too damn high, without it getting more new strings in it’s bow.

    Governments don’t seem to be anywhere near on top of keeping up with these AI developments either, so by the law starts accounting for all of this, the damage will be far done already.

      • yamanii@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Yep, this is a problem of volume of misinformation, the truth can just get buried by one single person generating thousands of fake photos, it’s really easy to lie, it’s really time consuming to fact check.

        • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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          5 months ago

          That’s precisely what I mean.

          The effort ratio between generating synthetic visual media and corroborating or disproving a given piece of visual media has literally inverted and then grown by an order of magnitude in the last 3-5 years. That is fucking WILD. And more than a bit scary, when you really start to consider the potential malicious implications. Which you can see being employed all over the place today.

    • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      On our vacation 2 weeks ago my wife made an awesome picture just with one guy annoyingly in the background. She just tucked him and clicked the button… poof gone, perfect photo.

  • RageAgainstTheRich@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Even a few months ago it was hard for people with the knowledge to use AI on photos. I don’t like the idea of this but its unavoidable. There is already so much misinformation and this will make it so much worse.

  • Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    Meh, those edited photos could have been created in Photoshop as well.

    This makes editing and retouching photos easier, and that’s a concern, but it’s not new.

    • FlihpFlorp@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      Something I heard in the photoshop VS ai argument is it makes an already existing process much faster and almost anyone can do it which increases the shear amount that one person or a group could make almost how a printing press made the production of books so much faster (if you’re in to history)

      I’m too tired to take a stance so I’m just sharing some arguments I’ve heard

      • Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        Making creating fake images even easier definitely isn’t great, I agree with you there, but it’s nothing that couldn’t already be done with Photoshop.

        I definitely don’t like the idea you can do this on your phone.

        • Bimbleby@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Exactly, it was already established that pictures from untrusted sources are to be disregarded unless they can be verified by trusted sources.

          It is basically how it has been forever with the written press: Just like everyone now has the capability to manipulate a picture. Everyone can write we are being invaded by aliens, but whether we should believe it is another thing.

          It might take some time for the general public to learn this, but it should be a focus area of general schooling within the area of source criticism.

  • stoy@lemmy.zip
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    5 months ago

    TL;DR: The new Reimage feature on the Google Pixel 9 phones is really good at AI manipulation, while being very easy to use. This is bad.

        • kernelle@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          Photoshop has existed for a bit now. So incredibly shocking it was only going to get better and easier to do, move along with the times oldtimer.

          • ggppjj@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Photoshop requires time and talent to make a believable image.

            This requires neither.

              • ggppjj@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                You said “but” like it invalidated what I said, instead of being a true statement and a non sequitur.

                You aren’t wrong, and I don’t think that changes what I said either.

                • kernelle@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  Lmao, “but” means your statement can be true and irrelevant at the same time. From the day photoshop could fool people lawyers have been trying to mark any image as faked, misplaced or out of context.

                  When you just now realise it’s an issue, that’s your problem. People can’t stop these tools from existing, so like, go yell at a cloud or something.

          • sorghum@sh.itjust.works
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            5 months ago

            Well yeah, I’m not concerned with its ease of use nowadays. I’m more concerned with the computer forensics experts not being able to detect a fake for which Photoshop has always been detectable.

    • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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      5 months ago

      I really don’t have much knowledge on it but it sound like it’s would be an actual good application of blockchain.

      Couldn’t a blockchain be used to certify that pictures are original and have not been tampered with ?

      On the other hand if it was possible I’m certain someone either have already started it, it is the prefect investor magnet “Using blockchain to counter AI

      • stoy@lemmy.zip
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        5 months ago

        How would that work?

        I am being serious, I am an IT and can’t see how that would work in any realistic way.

        And even if we had a working system to track all changes made to a photo, it would only work if the author submitted the original image before any change haf been made, but how would you verify that the original copy of a photo submitted to the system has not been tempered with?

        Sure, you could be required to submit the raw file from the camera, but it is only a matter of time untill AI can perfectly simulate an optical sensor to take a simulated raw of a simulated scene.

        Nope, we simply have to fall back on building trust with photo journalists, and trust digital signatures to tell us when we are seeing a photograph modified outsided of the journalist’s agency.

        • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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          5 months ago

          Yep, I think we pictures are becoming a valuable as text and it is fine, we just need to get used to it.

          Before photography became mainstream the only source of information was written, it is extremely simple to make a fake story so people had to rely on trusted sources. Then for a short period of history photography became a (kinda) reliable sources of information by itself and this trust system lost its importance.

          In most cases seeing a photo means that we were seeing a true reflection of what happened, especially if we were song multiple photos of the same event.

          Now we are arriving at the end of this period, we cannot trust a photo by itself anymore, tampering a photo is becoming as easy as writing a fake story. This is a great opportunity for journalists I believe.

  • zecg@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    It’s a shitty toy that’ll make some people sorry when they don’t have any photos from their night out without tiny godzilla dancing on their table. It won’t have the staying power Google wishes it to, since it’s useless except for gags.

    But, please, Verge,

    It took specialized knowledge and specialized tools to sabotage the intuitive trust in a photograph.

    get fucked

  • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    This is only a threat to people that took random picture at face value. Which should not have been a thing for a long while, generative AI or not.

    The source of an information/picture, as well as how it was checked has been the most important part of handling online content for decades. The fact that it is now easier for some people to make edits does not change that.

  • forgotmylastusername@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    It’s going to be used prolifically for something much more boring. Embellished product listings and fake reviews. If online shopping is frustrating now. It’s probably going to get a lot worse trying to weed out good quality things to buy as photographs are no longer reliable.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Well, one may hope for a “worse is better” scenario. As in Star Wars EU, where people generally do shopping as they still do in less developed areas of our planet - asking people they trust, which ask other people they trust, and so on.

      This is going to make centralized media a hellscape of fakery.

      It’s like with viruses - if a virus kills people too fast, it’ll kill itself.

      Maybe cypherpunk-style “public web” technologies will finally become mainstream, because the rest simply won’t be usable.

  • Hackworth@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    This is one of the required steps on the way to holodecks. I’ve been ready for it for 30 years.

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    5 months ago

    We’ve had fake photos for over 100 years at this point.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cottingley_Fairies

    Maybe it’s time to do something about confirming authenticity, rather than just accepting any old nonsense as evidence of anything.

    At this point anything can be presented as evidence, and now can be equally refuted as an AI fabrication.

    We need a new generation of secure cameras with internal signing of images and video (to prevent manipulation), built in LIDAR (to make sure they’re not filming a screen), periodic external timestamps of data (so nothing can be changed after the supposed date), etc.

    • ricdeh@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I am very opposed to this. It means surrendering all trust in pictures to Big Tech. If at some time only photos signed by Sony, Samsung, etc. are considered genuine, then photos taken with other equipment, e.g., independently manufactured cameras or image sensors, will be dismissed out of hand. If, however, you were to accept photos signed by the operating system on those devices regardless of who is the vendor, that would invalidate the entire purpose because everyone could just self-sign their pictures. This means that the only way to effectively enforce your approach is to surrender user freedom, and that runs contrary to the Free Software Movement and the many people around the world aligned with it. It would be a very dystopian world.

      • hobovision@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        There’s no need to make these things Big Tech, so if that’s why you are opposed to it, reconsider what you are actually opposed to. This could be implemented in a FOSS way or an open standard.

        So you not trust HTTPS because you’d have to trust big tech? Microsoft and Google and others sign the certificates you use to trust that your are sending your password to your bank and not a phisher. Like how any browser can see and validate certificates, any camera could have a validation or certificate system in place to prove that the data is straight from an unmodified validated camera sensor.

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        5 months ago

        It would also involve trusting those corporations not to fudge evidence themselves.

        I mean, not everything photo related would have to be like this.

        But if you wanted you photo to be able to document things, to provide evidence that could send people to prison or be executed…

        The other choice is that we no longer accept photographic, audio or video evidence in court at all. If it can no longer be trusted and even a complete novice can convincingly fake things, I don’t see how it can be used.

  • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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    5 months ago

    Okay so it’s the verge so I’m not exactly expecting much but seriously?

    No one on Earth today has ever lived in a world where photographs were not the linchpin of social consensus

    People have been faking photographs basically since day one, with techniques like double exposure. Also even more sophisticated photo manipulation has been possible with Photoshop which has existed for decades.

    There’s a photo of me taken in the '90s on thunder mountain at Disneyland which has been edited to look like I’m actually on a mountainside rather than in a theme park. I think we can deal with fakeable photographs the only difference here is the process is automatable which honestly doesn’t make even the blindest bit of difference. It’s quicker but so what.

    • Halcyon@discuss.tchncs.de
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      5 months ago

      The new technique distorts reality in a much larger way. That hasn’t been there before. When everybody has this in their smartphones, we will look at manipulated pics on an hourly basis. That’s unprecedented.

    • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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      5 months ago

      It used to take professionals or serious hobbyists to make something fake look believable. Now it’s at the tip of everyone’s fingers. Fake photos were already a smaller issue, but this very well could become a tidal wave of fakes trying to grab attention.

      Think about how many scammers there are. Think about how many horny boys there are. Think about how much online political fuckery goes around these days. When believable photographs of whatever you want people to believe are at the tips of anyone’s fingers, it’s very, very easy to start a wildfire of misinformation. And think about the young girls being tormented in middle school and high school. And all the scammable old people. And all the fascists willing to use any tool at their disposal to sow discord and hatred.

      It’s not a nothing problem. It could very well become a torrent of lies.

        • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          Your point being…?

          I mean…we can all see those are inanimate, right? But that doesn’t even change my point. If anything, it kinda helps prove my point. People are gullible as hell. What’s that saying? “A lie will get halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to pull its boots on.”

          A torrent of believable fakes will call into question photographic evidence. I mean, we’ve all seen it happening already. Some kinda strange or interesting picture shows up and everyone is claiming it was AI generated. That’s the other half of the problem.

          Photographic evidence is now called into question readily. That happened with photoshop too, but like I said, throw enough shit against the wall—with millions and millions of other people also throwing shit at the wall—and some is bound to stick. The probability is skyrocketing now that it’s in everyone’s hands and the actually AIgen pictures are becoming indecipherable from photo evidence.

          That low effort fairy hoax made a bunch of people believe there were 8in. fairies just existing in the world, regardless of how silly that was. Now, stick something entirely believable into a photograph that only barely blurs the lines of reality and it can be like wildfire. Have you seen those stupid Facebook AI pages? Like shrimp Jesus, the kids in Africa building cars out of garlic cloves, etc. People are falling for that dumbass shit. Now put Kamala Harris doing something shady and release it in late October. I would honestly be surprised if we’re not hit with at least one situation like that in a few months.

      • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Come on, science fiction had similar technologies to fake things since 40s. The writing was on the wall.

        It didn’t really work outside of authors’ and readers’ imagination, but the only reason we’re scared is that we’re forced into centralized hierarchical systems in which it’s harder to defend.

        • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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          5 months ago

          I mean, sure, deception as a concept has always been around. But let me just put it this way:

          How many more scam emails, scam texts, how many more data leaks, conspiracy theories are going around these days? All of these things always existed. The Nigerian prince scam. That one’s been around forever. The door-to-door salesman, that one’s been around forever. The snake oil charlatan. Scams and lies have been around since we could communicate, probably. But never before have we been bombarded with them like we are today. Before, it took a guy with a rotary phone and a phone book a full day to try to scam 100 people. Now 100 calls go out all at once with a different fake phone number for each, spoofed to be as close to the recipient’s number as possible.

          The effort input needed for these things have dropped significantly with new tech, and their prevalence skyrocketed. It’s not a new story. In fact, it’s a very old story. It’s just more common and much easier, so it’s taken up by more people because it’s more lucrative. Why spend all of your time trying to hack a campaign’s email (which is also still happening), when you can make one suspicious picture and get all of your bots to get it trending so your company gets billions in tax breaks? All at the click of a button. Then send your spam bots to call millions of people a day to spread the information about the picture, and your email bots to spam the picture to every Facebook conspiracy theorist. All in a matter of seconds.

          This isn’t a matter of “what if.” This is kind of just the law of scams. It will be used for evil. No question. And it does have an effect. You can’t have random numbers call you anymore without you immediately expecting their spam. Soon, you won’t be able to get photo evidence without immediately thinking it might be fake. Water flows downhill, new tech gets used for scams. The like a law of nature at this point.

          • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Wise people still teach their children (and remind themselves) not to talk to strangers, say “no” if not sure, mind their own business because their attention and energy are not infinite, and trust only family.

            You can’t have random numbers call you anymore without you immediately expecting their spam.

            You’d be wary of people who are not your neighbors in the Middle Ages. Were you a nobleman, you’d still mostly talk to people you knew since childhood, yours or theirs, and the rare new faces would be people you’ve heard about since childhood, yours or theirs.

            It’s not a new danger. Even qualitatively - the change for a villager coming to a big city during the industrial revolution was much more radical.

            • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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              5 months ago

              That’s exactly what I meant when I said:

              It’s not a new story. In fact, it’s a very old story.

              And you just kinda proved my point. As time has gone on, the great of deception has grown with new technology. This is just the latest iteration. And every new one has expanded the chances/danger exponentially.

              • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                What I really meant is that humanity is a self-regulating system. This disturbance will be regulated just as well as those other ones.

                The unpleasant thing is that the example I’ve given involved lots of new power being created, while our disturbance is the opposite - people\forces already having power desperately trying to preserve their relative weight, at the cost of preventing new power being created.

                But we will see if they’ll succeed. After all, the very reason they are doing this is because they can’t create power, and that is because their institutional understanding is lacking, and this in turn means that they are not in fact doing what they think they are. And by forcing those who can create power to the fringe, they are accelerating the tendencies for relief.

                • TheFriar@lemm.ee
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                  5 months ago

                  I don’t think this is the power redistribution you’re implying it is. I’m not actually sure what you mean by that. The power to create truths? To spread propaganda? I can’t think of any other power this tech would redistribute. Would you mind explaining?

  • PenisDuckCuck9001@lemmynsfw.com
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    5 months ago

    The world’s billionaires probably know there’s lots of photographic evidence of stuff they did at Epstien island floating around out there. This is why they’re trying to make ai produce art so realistic that photographs are no longer considered evidence so they can just claim its ai generated if any of that stuff ever gets out.

  • yamanii@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    These photoshop comments are missing the point that it’s just like art, a good edit that can fool everyone needs someone that practiced a lot and has lots of experience, now even the lazy asses on the right can fake it easily.

    • uienia@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Yeah, it is going to be mainly a quantity issue rather than a quality one. The quality of faked photos has already been high since photoshop. Now a constant growing avalanche of high quality fakes (produced by all sorts of different vested interests with their own particular purposes) is going to barrage us on a daily basis, simply because it is cheap and easy

    • Drewelite@lemmynsfw.com
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      5 months ago

      I think this comment misses the point that even one doctored photo created by a team of highly skilled individuals can change the course of history. And when that’s what it takes, it’s easier to sell it to the public.

      What matters is the source. What we’re being forced to reckon with now is: the assumption that photos capture indisputable reality has never and will never be true. That’s why we invented journalism. Ethically driven people to investigate and be impartial sources of truth on what’s happening in the world. But we’ve neglected and abused the profession so much that it’s a shell of what we need it to be.

      • uienia@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        The thing is that in the future the mere quantity of fakes will make the careful vetting process you describe physically impossible. You will be bombarded with high quality fakes to such an extent that you will simply have to give up trying to keep up, so it will be a choice of either dropping the vetting process or dropping bringing any pictures altogether. For profit driven corporate jwbed media outlets, the choice unfortunately will be obvious.

        • Drewelite@lemmynsfw.com
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          5 months ago

          I’m not talking about vetting pictures. I’m talking about journalists who investigate issues THEMSELVES and uncover the truth. They take their OWN pictures and post them on their website and accounts putting their credibility as collateral. We trust them, not because it’s a picture, but because of who took it.

          This already happened with text, people learned “Don’t believe everything you read!” And invented the press to figure out the truth. It used to be a core part of our society. But people were tricked into thinking pictures and video were somehow mediums of empirical truth, just because it’s HARD to fake. But never impossible. Which is worse, actually. So we neglected the press and let it collapse into a shit show because we thought we could do it ourselves.