Happy 20th birthday to this young child! Good luck blowing out all those candles.

  • FuckyWucky [none/use name]
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    2 months ago

    weird how it looks like an actual old photo. many errors but if you dont pay attention you won't notice .

    • UlyssesT
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      24 days ago

      deleted by creator

      • Frank [he/him, he/him]
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        2 months ago

        I'm genuinely frightened that they're going to fix the hand problem soon. It's one of the last tells that's reasonably consistently reliable. They're going to build some engine that just does hands and interprets a correct hand orientation based on the position of the arms, looks up a 3d reference model because these things can't abstract, and then sketches in a hand over the LLM generated image.

        It's so fucked. We've evolved the uncanny valley response for god knows how many millions of years so we know when something is wrong with a face - it's dead, or it's a person who is seriously ill, or it's not a person at all. And now they've mostly defeated that and we're counting teeth and fingers.

        • KobaCumTribute [she/her]
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          2 months ago

          I'm genuinely frightened that they're going to fix the hand problem soon.

          I hate to break it to you, but that's been varying degrees of solved for over a year. Most AI slop that just contains ludicrous basic errors is left unfixed because the people who spam AI slop are principally just incredibly stupid, lazy chuds slamming the treat button like it's a gacha pull, but even something as basic as automatic1111 or its relatives allowed manual inpainting to reroll broken parts of the image, then added optional automatic secondary processes to detect faces and hands and run an automated inpainting process to fix them with dedicated "fix faces and hands" models.

          Now currently relevant open models range from "sometimes it doesn't fuck up" to "the only tell is that proportions are subtly off and that sometimes there are continuity issues that give away that there's not any sort of reality behind the image nor even an internal model of what is there in places you can't directly see, but it's less glaring than it used to be" and it's only getting more horrifying. Looking at "realistic" models always makes me feel sort of sick, even beyond the rote kind-vladimir-ilyich response I feel whenever I look at civitai.

        • UlyssesT
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          24 days ago

          deleted by creator

          • Frank [he/him, he/him]
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            2 months ago

            It's completely sick, capitalism's obsession with cutting labor out of production taken somewhere I don't even know how to say mean things about.

            On the plus side, though, I'm increasingly confident that my fears of these fucks perfecting terminators, wiping out the working class, and living eternally in their little New Zealand technobunkers served by a world of robots is unfounded. These toolbags have no idea what they're doing, or they're all trying to convince everyone else that it's not a grift long enough to cash out.

            • UlyssesT
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              24 days ago

              deleted by creator

  • Frank [he/him, he/him]
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    2 months ago

    It's super cool how it's now difficult and requires active attention to determine whether even a still image depicts something real or is a non-representation built out of computer generated noise and stolen dreams. I really love that for us I'm thrilled with it I kind of wish I was off my meds because I cannot scream at the right frequency when I'm not experiencing severe bipolar depression in the way this makes me need to scream.

    • UlyssesT
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      24 days ago

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    • Hexamerous [none/use name]
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      2 months ago

      I didn't even catch it at first, was really confused by the titel.

      Welcome to cyberhell.

      kitty-cri-texas

    • Mardoniush [she/her]
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      2 months ago

      I find it's not that hard, AI images give me an instant feeling of wrongness now.

    • Frank [he/him, he/him]
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      2 months ago

      That's the trick. It isn't anything. It's a statistical representation of patterns of data that appear in image data with the appropriate tag words. None of the "things" in this picture are things, there are no representations of actual objects. It's all math, heat maps, patterns in data. That's why it gets fucked up at the edges and boundaries of things. There's no mind that can understand the existence of abstract objects like "cake" and "candle" and "mom". It's just maths putting colors where they're statistically most likely to go based on the input set, and those colors smear together at the edges.

      That's the hardest part; Up until literally four years ago the only time we'd ever encounter an image that strongly resembled a human is if it was the work of another human attempting to depict a human. There's no attempt at depicting anything here. Nothing is depicted. This isn't an image of people. It's just the averages of a bunch of numbers with colors assigned to them. It's nothing. It's so fucking weird and disturbing, like we barely, as a culture, have a conceptual framework for this nightmare.

      • UlyssesT
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        24 days ago

        deleted by creator

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]
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          2 months ago

          I'm going back in time to give the luddites a mecha.

          I hope I'm right about how these things work because I do not understand any of the math or programming behind them. All I know is that when a person draws a fucked up hand it's because hands are really hard to draw due to hands being in all kinds of different shapes based on what they're doing, and having many many different planes and angles and perspective doohickeys. But a person knows a hand is a hand. Show them a human hand with a five fingers, or six fingers, or a steel hook, or a grasping robot clow, or a lobster claw, or whatever, they can identify all of those things as a category of objects called "hands".

          And the machines don't do that. There's no indication that the machine has a concept of an abstract object called "hand" that is the same object regardless of it's actual appearance in a 2d image. There's no evidence of a concept of a squarish meaty bit with four thing meat sticks and a fat shorter meat stick. It's just blurs that resemble figures because the machine doesn't "think" or "know" or "represent" anything when it outputs these images.

          And if I'm wrong, and there is something thinking in there, and it just fucks these things up because it's entire perceptual world consists of datasets with no attached information or context? Fuck me, idk. The whole thing freaks me the fuck out because we really are getting in to the deep water of "If we did encounter a non-human intelligence how would we even know?" The people who think these things have human-like intelligence are massively ignorant dorks but I keep having spooky dreams about symbioses between trees and mushroom networks or the way ant hives engage in complex problem solving based on the simple, rules based action of individual ants.

          • UlyssesT
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            24 days ago

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    • anarcho_blinkenist [none/use name]
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      2 months ago

      goddd that thing is such a mindfuck to look at lol. It's like you're sure you're looking at something real but it makes no sense. It feels like that time my alleged friend allegedly drank a bottle of robitussin

  • DamarcusArt@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 months ago

    Look, sometimes as a birthday present to their young child, dads will swap a hand with them. It's totally normal.

    • Belly_Beanis [he/him]
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      2 months ago

      I think that's supposed to be the mom's hand wrapping around from behind.

        • Belly_Beanis [he/him]
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          2 months ago

          Isn't that the hand of the kid on the right? Dad's hands seem down at his sides and under the table.

  • Belly_Beanis [he/him]
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    2 months ago

    "Computer, make me a picture of a late 90s, early 2000s birthday party for a small child."

    hides smartphone in the corner

  • Evilphd666 [he/him, comrade/them]
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    2 months ago

    I too like to put numberous straws in my [not baskin robbins] gallon of ice cream all smoothly domed like cake frosting. Oh and we had to do a 1 instead of 31 otherwise the copywrite nazis would hit us up for residuals knowing we trained AI on pictures with defunct logos and colors in them so we had to shop the OG input file to poison our own product and train it on an alternate reality.

    Show

      • Evilphd666 [he/him, comrade/them]
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        2 months ago

        Dad's shaddow is going in a 2D plane as if an extention of his arm, not showing levels between the chair and the wal behind. As if the light source was strongly directly coming from his other shoulder instead of hitting his face.

        Show

        And opposite the birthday girl.

        Also are the kids triplets because they seem the same age, which is odd for a couple with three kids. You'd expect some 9 month stagger or a span of a few years. The boys look like they are clones jsut from different angles.

        How all the fingers have creepy pointed jagged ends.

  • Weedian [he/him]
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    2 months ago

    I like the smallest child hidden by the boy on the left with the giant hand reaching onto the table

    also dads one black stripe down his shirt's right sleeve

    and the differences in the angles of the paintings hanging on the wall behind dad, does the wall curve like 15 degrees there?

    not sure whats going on with birthday girl's right hand

  • Hexboare [they/them]
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    2 months ago

    Damn this AI stuff is really cornering the market for fake children birthday pictures, I better buy some NVIDIA puts

  • Mardoniush [she/her]
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    2 months ago

    Having a lot of fun doing trigonometry on the proportions of the woman's left arm.

    • xia@lemmy.sdf.org
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      2 months ago

      It took me a while to see this as anything but a vanishing point, but now I see what you mean. I think it still could make sense if the right section was a long-radius curve. :)