Maybe we could stop giving a platform to the crazies that foster those stories. Both of them; the idiots that see ai artefacts everywhere but also the fear mongers of the sort of the blog here. It reminds me of Ā«Ā be afraid of rpgsĀ Ā» in the 80ies and then Ā«Ā videos games are going to turn teens in murderersĀ Ā» in the 90iesā¦ every new tech has curves for their maturity, cultural & societal fit. We just so happen to be at the shitty times for ai. But eventually the fad will go away, most crazies will move to something else and attention whores will also find a new niche.
every new tech has curves for their maturity, cultural & societal fit.
Iād believe this ānothing to see hereā narrative if recent āadvancesā such as social media didnāt have measurable negative impacts. Things can get worse, and technology can assist that.
The voices coming out as skeptical of things, and the watchdogs telling you early on that these newly introduced things may present a problem are ultimately part of the apparatus that gets you ācultural and societal fitā. That doesnāt happen automatically and itās called āthe bleeding edgeā for a reason.
Ultimately, Iām also not so sure about AI being a fad at this point. It sure looks like enough capital is invested in this stuff to make it be a thing even if nobody wants it.
big oof.
We can conclude: that photo isnāt AI-generated. You canāt get an AI system to generate photos of an existing location; itās just not possible given the current state of the art.
the author of this substack is woefully misinformed about the state of technology š¤¦
it has, in fact, been possible for several years already for anyone to quickly generate convincing images (not to mention videos) of fictional scenes in real locations with very little effort.
The photographāwhich appeared on the Associated Press feed, I thinkāwas simply taken from a higher vantage point.
Wow, it keeps getting worse. Theyāre going full CSI on this photo, drawing a circle around a building on google street view where they think the photographer might have been, but they arenāt even going to bother to try to confirm their vague memory of having seen AP publishing it? wtf?
Fwiw, I also thought the image looked a little neural network-y (something about the slightly less-straight-than-they-used-to-be lines of some of the vehicles) so i spent a few seconds doing a reverse image search and found this snopes page from which i am convinced that that particular pileup of cars really did happen as it was also photographed by multiple other people.
The photo seems off somehow, I wonder if it is taken with a phone with some kind of AI sharpening algorithm.
Sorry, big derailment of subject here:
The author described 40cm of rain, which was unusual to me, since we normally describe the rain in millimetres.
Then they translated it to American as 16 inches or 70 gallons per square yard.
The neat thing about 400 mm is, that itās also 400 litres per square metre.
And itās also crazy much, my heart goes out to Valencia.
And itās gonna get worse, because itās a very lucrative industry AND itās highly effective for propaganda.