Surprised the 2008 Iranian missile fake didn't make it in! This was one the demo images we used to show off our forgery detection software in the early days of Inscribe before we focused in on documents as a company.
That is interesting, although the originals are more convincing! Not least because (as you point out) the grain and blur of the original photos aren't matched.
vunderba 4 hours ago [-]
Shame that CivitAI doesn't have a Soviet Union propaganda LoRA. :)
What qualifies the Jennifer in Paradise photo being in there? That photo reportedly is real, even according to the description given.
It was used as a demonstration photo in a famous photo-editing program which was used to fool the world, but the image is ostensibly a real photo, not a fake image.
k1t 1 hours ago [-]
The fact that there's two of her.
thaumasiotes 2 hours ago [-]
Nothing. Nothing qualifies several of them; the photo of Filippa Hamilton is noted in the blurb as immediately drawing ridicule from the public.
Or take this description of the edited image of Elvis:
> the United Press agency decided to create a mock-up of what the king of rock’n’roll might look like with the typical GI hairstyle, retouching a photo of the singer to remove his quiff (and leaving him with a somewhat disfigured head). “Not all manipulated photographs are intended to deceive,” notes Mia Fineman, a curator at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art
Only the headline says "images that fooled the world"; the article is about something different.
bryanrasmussen 1 hours ago [-]
you can be fooled by something without anyone intending to deceive you, if people believed that is actually what Elvis was going to look like they would have been "fooled" whether anyone had that intention.
djoldman 3 days ago [-]
A great example that underscores the ordinariness of AI. It's a tool and tools can be used for good/bad/neither and inbetween.
Fake pics have existed since pics existed pretty much.
Kids have been looking for ways to cheat on tests since tests began. If you're a teacher, you're gonna have to test in person.
Fake phone calls, fake other things... yea they're of a different/better quality as the technology has gotten better. Is it so fundamental a shift that nothing can be done? I'm not convinced.
blackbear_ 3 days ago [-]
The ease of cheating/creating fakes surely influences how much cheating/fakes are in circulation, and while we can tolerate a little, excessive amounts will be disruptive. So many technologies moved from obscure curiosities to mass adoption just because somebody made them easier/cheaper to use.
If at some point the cheats/fakes will be cheaper and easier than the real thing, you can bet that will be a fundamental shift in how we approach the world.
tgv 3 days ago [-]
It's not only the excess, it's the ease of access. Kids can produce lewd pics of class mates, and make their lives hell. This technology is fundamentally evil.
Ntrails 2 days ago [-]
I know it's not the same - but I remember the "bubbling" phase a few years back. It was a bit messy and fortunately faded away pretty quick
smegger001 3 days ago [-]
With as easy and widespread it is I wonder how long before the general assumption will be that nude pics and videos are fakes and will loose its power. It will be just another ai porn on the mountain of other shitty ai porn.
tgv 3 days ago [-]
What good can it be used for? Because I haven't seen anything that makes faking pics with AI so good we can ignore the negatives.
The article also seems to take the relativist stance: nothing new to see here, move along now. Why? For the clicks? Just being contrarian?
djoldman 3 days ago [-]
Many manifestations of generative AI allow people to put concepts onto screens faster. It generally serves as a more efficient translator of "I want a contract like this one but more tailored to [new client]" or "I want to make a strategy for my [new business]."
In information economy jobs, translating thoughts and ideas into better formal communications more efficiently is valuable. Be it pictures or text.
tgv 2 days ago [-]
A cynic is a man who knows the price of everything, and the value of nothing.
godelski 6 hours ago [-]
The same generation process is also used for... well... generating anything. They are compression functions so you are learning an intractable data distribution (you can't write down the equation) and then turning it into something you have a bit more control over. Images were/are a great test platform for this since we humans can visually identify the outputs and verify that we've accurately learned a good generating function. But this process can be applied to any data and truthfully, variants of it are used all throughout since and have been for decades (arguably at least a century, but statistics really benefited from computers).
For just the domain of image generation there's still a lot of useful things. Want to do any upscaling? The processes can help there as you're learning a more complex transform than something like a bicubic interpolation (yeah, there are more advanced algorithms, this is just an example). Same is actually true for downsampling. We can even talk about rotating images, which is a classic problem in old videogames. There's also typical photo editing. This is done widely, most notably by Hollywood. Even if your AI only gets you 70% of the way there it can still be helpful (if the first 70% isn't trivial). It is also directly used in compression algorithms. It is much cheaper to share an encoder and decoder structure which can be computed locally and then transmit a smaller signal. The transmission is not only typically the more expensive part but usually also the bottleneck and has the largest chance of data corruption.
Yeah, I agree, most people are using the tech in weird ways and there's a lot of weird hype around malformed images that are obviously malformed if you looked at it with more than a passing glance (or not through rose colored glasses). But there are a lot of useful applications to this stuff. Ones that could far more benefit the world and personally I'm left wondering "why isn't even a small fraction of the investment that's going into status quo image generators and LLMs going into these other domains?" I'm guessing because image generators and LLms are easier to understand? But it is a shame.
2 days ago [-]
add-sub-mul-div 3 days ago [-]
So tired of this lazy argument. Projectile murder with bows existed before guns. Guns changed the world. A severe force multiplier for something bad can't automatically be handwaved away.
djoldman 3 days ago [-]
Guns have little use beyond injuring or killing or threatening the same. On the good side: one could argue it's sometimes good to kill for hunting. On the bad side... well there is a lot of suicide, murder, and potential for the same.
I'm not sure we understand yet how much positive and how much negative potential there is in AI.
wruza 2 days ago [-]
Variations of guns (high pressure tubes with plugs) also shoot nails, pilings, and can quickly split hard surfaces like rocks or pavement. They are also natural parents of internal combustion engines.
Not arguing, just saying.
pessimizer 8 hours ago [-]
> Is it so fundamental a shift that nothing can be done? I'm not convinced.
A fundamental shift in our complete trust of technology is good. It encourages ignorance and obedience, and alienates people from each other.
And the fact that AI can be used to fake pictures of your neighbors having sex is nothing but good. No one will be able to say whether any picture is real, so the public won't be able to destroy another young girl's life over it. I also think that arguing about the distribution of pretend movies of your neighbors having sex will have to lead to clear legislation regarding the distribution and sale of personal data.
brewdad 3 hours ago [-]
I wish I could be as optimistic as you with regards to human nature. While we may come out the other side with a world that solves the real problems AI will create. I fear millions of people will have their lives destroyed along the way. Half of America thinks “criminals” don’t deserve Due Process. The guilt stems directly from the accusation. In short, people suck.
the_af 3 days ago [-]
I agree photo manipulation has always happened, to various degrees of perfection, since the dawn of photography.
I suppose the real difference is that before it took a more artisanal, time-consuming process, and now -- increasingly -- it takes far less time to create something convincing enough. Same with video: you could fake a video, do editing, etc, but it took time, skill, a location where to shoot, etc. Now it's becoming easier to do for everyone. And it's not perfect yet, but are we sure it won't get there? And it doesn't have to be perfect anyway, it just has to fool most people in a given window of time.
drcongo 3 days ago [-]
There's some terrible examples in here, and yet no mention of Roger Fenton's Valley of the Shadow of Death.
vfclists 3 days ago [-]
What!!?? No mention of the Apollo 11 photos?
JKCalhoun 5 hours ago [-]
And 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17!
vunderba 4 hours ago [-]
uhhh...
To quote sesame street: "One of These Things Is Not Like the Others".
mcphage 3 days ago [-]
Or the round globe!
a3w 3 days ago [-]
Or Hillary Clintons green scaly skin
quantadev 6 hours ago [-]
It was actually just yesterday when I decided youtube shorts are no longer a fun way to kill time. There's a lot of amazing stuff to watch, but it's no fun any more, because anything you see that seems amazing is likely to be AI Generated which, for me, ruins it. You're not watching videos of reality, you're basically looking at digital art at this point.
Photos, Videos, and Audio are longer "proof" of anything. Any 10 year old kid can generate basically anything he wants. I love AI, but it's sad to be living in a world where now 'Authenticity' itself is permanently dead.
JKCalhoun 5 hours ago [-]
Old issues of Playboy are popular for a reason. (I'll just leave it at that. Sorry.)
quantadev 3 hours ago [-]
Yeah, I'm a big fan, ...but only for the articles.
3 days ago [-]
the_af 3 days ago [-]
The article is interesting, but I think it conflates two things:
"Things that never happened in the real world, and have been either created synthetically or with visual trickery"
- Man jumping into the void.
- Stalin's edited photos (Stalin didn't walk without Yezov at his side).
- North Korea's photoshopped/cloned hovercraft.
- The Cottingley Fairies, Loch Ness monster, "saucer" UFOs: visual trickery or props employed to simulate the existence of beings or vehicles that don't exist in the real world.
- Pope with jacket is of course completely faked with AI.
And
"Things that happened, but are staged or misrepresent reality/mislead the viewer".
Examples:
- The UK soldiers abusing a prisoner. The claim was probably false (in the sense in this particlar photo these weren't British soldiers) but it's true they were soldiers from some country abusing a prisoner. To my knowledge no-one claimed the photo was staged, just that it was misrepresenting the situation.
- Capa's Falling Soldier photo. This actually happened, it's just that it's likely staged.
They are not the same thing, and require different levels of skill!
AI facilitates creating anything, especially completely synthetic and fake. You don't even need to go to the location to take a photo and edit it.
david-gpu 3 days ago [-]
And some of the photos are labeled as "fake" with zero evidence that they are, indeed, fake.
I personally don't believe in Bigfoot, but the article presents no evidence of that particular shot being altered or staged in any way.
mcphage 3 days ago [-]
They don’t know specifically how it was done—but it is, in fact, fake.
david-gpu 2 days ago [-]
There is a difference between beliefs substantiated by a gut feeling and beliefs substantiated by evidence. Like you, I have a gut feeling that it is, indeed, a person in a suit, but I do not have any evidence for that. The distinction is important in my mind.
the_af 2 days ago [-]
I agree it's not evidence, but even then, going by the principle of parsimony (which does not provide evidence, but is a reasonable way of thinking about this) the most likely explanation is also the less extraordinary or convoluted: a guy in a gorilla suit. Why reach for anything else, unless one wants to believe?
The existence of yetis is an extraordinary claim that would require convincing evidence by their proponents, of which this video isn't one (since it's trivial to film a guy in a suit, etc).
JKCalhoun 5 hours ago [-]
I understand your logic. I just find I don't have patience to split hairs any more for an academic stance like yours. To do so these days is too overwhelming.
As xkcd has pointed out, there are cameras everywhere now. I think we can comfortably put Big Foot and the Loch Ness Monster in the bin with the Fairies.
the_af 3 days ago [-]
I mean, it's obviously a guy in a gorilla suit. It walks like a guy, nothing about its "gait" is animal-like. A gorilla suit is well understood technology, it's just that this one was nicely made and not a cheap costume party suit.
Same with the guy who made saucer-like UFO photos. This is obviously dishware, only people who "want to believe" would be puzzled by the photos.
foldr 2 days ago [-]
>The UK soldiers abusing a prisoner. [...] To my knowledge no-one claimed the photo was staged, just that it was misrepresenting the situation.
These photos were staged AFAIK. I don't think anyone believes them to show real instances of abuse.
Wow. Thanks for the correction, I didn't know this.
Reasoning 3 days ago [-]
"By the 1940s, the image without the groom had become the standard version, and it created the enduring visual signs of the strongman leader – when Nigel Farage makes a speech atop a tank, or Vladimir Putin displays his bare chest, both are drawing on iconography developed by the Italian fascist."
Ah yes, equestrian portraits, something famously invented by the fascists. Someone should dig up Jacques-Louis so we can tell him he's a fascist now.
antod 7 hours ago [-]
Saying Mussolini developed iconography involving equestrian portraits is not the same as saying he invented equestrian portraits.
excalibur 3 days ago [-]
Surprised the article makes no mention of the 2023 AI-assisted enhancement of the Patterson-Gimlin Bigfoot clip. It's definitely a guy in a gorilla suit.
How could AI not make it look more like a man? Was the AI trained on lots of bigfoot footage? Or was it trained on lots of pictures of people? Give it enough leeway and it will probably render bigfoot as a man in a Barney costume, if that better confirms to the training data.
CharlesW 3 days ago [-]
AI wasn't used to generate the clip, but to add some (hallucinated) detail and extend the background. FWIW, in pre-genAI stabilized examples from the 2000s it's also clearly a guy in a gorilla suit.
JKCalhoun 5 hours ago [-]
Here is just an image-stabilized version (from 12 years ago if the YouTube date is assumed to be correct). No AI required.
Is there any doubt it's a gorilla suit? I think the article is disingenuous in not stating this clearly.
The article claims the suits of the apes in Planet of the Apes were "unconvincing", but they are just as convincing as the Bigfoot image, which is to say: they are clearly (nicely made) costumes.
We didn't need AI to "prove" what was already evident. And let me assure you -- this won't convince conspiracy theorists and Bigfoot fans, because above all, like Mulder, they "want to believe".
icameron 3 days ago [-]
Why does stabilizing the image make it any more or less apparent?
JKCalhoun 5 hours ago [-]
You can see the link I posted (https://youtu.be/Vsj0vK8LjVk). To my eye it makes it more clear that it is just a dude walking like any human in a costume would.
I don't recommend it, but there is an image-stabilized Zapruder film out there that makes the Kennedy assassination a good deal more shocking/gruesome. You've been warned.
drooby 4 hours ago [-]
What if Bigfoot just happens to walk similarly to how people in gorilla costumes walk?
I mean after all.. Bigfoot is a humanoid..
the_af 3 days ago [-]
I think it just means it removes the distractions of the grain and shaky camera.
But really, it was always evident it was a guy in a gorilla suit.
Rendered at 07:45:39 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.
https://www.npr.org/2008/07/11/92442928/photo-of-irans-missi...
https://mordenstar.com/blog/historic-deepfakes-with-ai
Though there is this:
https://civitai.com/models/877883/soviet-era-ussr-retro-futu...
It was used as a demonstration photo in a famous photo-editing program which was used to fool the world, but the image is ostensibly a real photo, not a fake image.
Or take this description of the edited image of Elvis:
> the United Press agency decided to create a mock-up of what the king of rock’n’roll might look like with the typical GI hairstyle, retouching a photo of the singer to remove his quiff (and leaving him with a somewhat disfigured head). “Not all manipulated photographs are intended to deceive,” notes Mia Fineman, a curator at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art
Only the headline says "images that fooled the world"; the article is about something different.
Fake pics have existed since pics existed pretty much.
Kids have been looking for ways to cheat on tests since tests began. If you're a teacher, you're gonna have to test in person.
Fake phone calls, fake other things... yea they're of a different/better quality as the technology has gotten better. Is it so fundamental a shift that nothing can be done? I'm not convinced.
If at some point the cheats/fakes will be cheaper and easier than the real thing, you can bet that will be a fundamental shift in how we approach the world.
The article also seems to take the relativist stance: nothing new to see here, move along now. Why? For the clicks? Just being contrarian?
In information economy jobs, translating thoughts and ideas into better formal communications more efficiently is valuable. Be it pictures or text.
For just the domain of image generation there's still a lot of useful things. Want to do any upscaling? The processes can help there as you're learning a more complex transform than something like a bicubic interpolation (yeah, there are more advanced algorithms, this is just an example). Same is actually true for downsampling. We can even talk about rotating images, which is a classic problem in old videogames. There's also typical photo editing. This is done widely, most notably by Hollywood. Even if your AI only gets you 70% of the way there it can still be helpful (if the first 70% isn't trivial). It is also directly used in compression algorithms. It is much cheaper to share an encoder and decoder structure which can be computed locally and then transmit a smaller signal. The transmission is not only typically the more expensive part but usually also the bottleneck and has the largest chance of data corruption.
Yeah, I agree, most people are using the tech in weird ways and there's a lot of weird hype around malformed images that are obviously malformed if you looked at it with more than a passing glance (or not through rose colored glasses). But there are a lot of useful applications to this stuff. Ones that could far more benefit the world and personally I'm left wondering "why isn't even a small fraction of the investment that's going into status quo image generators and LLMs going into these other domains?" I'm guessing because image generators and LLms are easier to understand? But it is a shame.
I'm not sure we understand yet how much positive and how much negative potential there is in AI.
Not arguing, just saying.
A fundamental shift in our complete trust of technology is good. It encourages ignorance and obedience, and alienates people from each other.
And the fact that AI can be used to fake pictures of your neighbors having sex is nothing but good. No one will be able to say whether any picture is real, so the public won't be able to destroy another young girl's life over it. I also think that arguing about the distribution of pretend movies of your neighbors having sex will have to lead to clear legislation regarding the distribution and sale of personal data.
I suppose the real difference is that before it took a more artisanal, time-consuming process, and now -- increasingly -- it takes far less time to create something convincing enough. Same with video: you could fake a video, do editing, etc, but it took time, skill, a location where to shoot, etc. Now it's becoming easier to do for everyone. And it's not perfect yet, but are we sure it won't get there? And it doesn't have to be perfect anyway, it just has to fool most people in a given window of time.
To quote sesame street: "One of These Things Is Not Like the Others".
Photos, Videos, and Audio are longer "proof" of anything. Any 10 year old kid can generate basically anything he wants. I love AI, but it's sad to be living in a world where now 'Authenticity' itself is permanently dead.
"Things that never happened in the real world, and have been either created synthetically or with visual trickery"
- Man jumping into the void.
- Stalin's edited photos (Stalin didn't walk without Yezov at his side).
- North Korea's photoshopped/cloned hovercraft.
- The Cottingley Fairies, Loch Ness monster, "saucer" UFOs: visual trickery or props employed to simulate the existence of beings or vehicles that don't exist in the real world.
- Pope with jacket is of course completely faked with AI.
And
"Things that happened, but are staged or misrepresent reality/mislead the viewer".
Examples:
- The UK soldiers abusing a prisoner. The claim was probably false (in the sense in this particlar photo these weren't British soldiers) but it's true they were soldiers from some country abusing a prisoner. To my knowledge no-one claimed the photo was staged, just that it was misrepresenting the situation.
- Capa's Falling Soldier photo. This actually happened, it's just that it's likely staged.
They are not the same thing, and require different levels of skill!
AI facilitates creating anything, especially completely synthetic and fake. You don't even need to go to the location to take a photo and edit it.
I personally don't believe in Bigfoot, but the article presents no evidence of that particular shot being altered or staged in any way.
The existence of yetis is an extraordinary claim that would require convincing evidence by their proponents, of which this video isn't one (since it's trivial to film a guy in a suit, etc).
As xkcd has pointed out, there are cameras everywhere now. I think we can comfortably put Big Foot and the Loch Ness Monster in the bin with the Fairies.
Same with the guy who made saucer-like UFO photos. This is obviously dishware, only people who "want to believe" would be puzzled by the photos.
These photos were staged AFAIK. I don't think anyone believes them to show real instances of abuse.
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2005/dec/09/iraqandthemedi...
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/sorry-we-were-hoaxed-5...
Ah yes, equestrian portraits, something famously invented by the fascists. Someone should dig up Jacques-Louis so we can tell him he's a fascist now.
https://www.indy100.com/science-tech/bigfoot-footage-ai-sigh...
https://youtu.be/Vsj0vK8LjVk
The article claims the suits of the apes in Planet of the Apes were "unconvincing", but they are just as convincing as the Bigfoot image, which is to say: they are clearly (nicely made) costumes.
We didn't need AI to "prove" what was already evident. And let me assure you -- this won't convince conspiracy theorists and Bigfoot fans, because above all, like Mulder, they "want to believe".
I don't recommend it, but there is an image-stabilized Zapruder film out there that makes the Kennedy assassination a good deal more shocking/gruesome. You've been warned.
I mean after all.. Bigfoot is a humanoid..
But really, it was always evident it was a guy in a gorilla suit.