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Just stumbled across this. I don't generally like Tony's/Chelsey's stuff, but I found this one interesting.
View: https://youtu.be/zkdO-q9zJec?si=3lrzyYpnvsVZ27ng
I haven't watched this, but...Just stumbled across this. I don't generally like Tony's/Chelsey's stuff, but I found this one interesting.
View: https://youtu.be/zkdO-q9zJec?si=3lrzyYpnvsVZ27ng
It is a problem for International and National Salons which probably do not allow AI in their competitions. It does now mean some of the best images come under close scrutiny as it can be difficult to identify AI with certainty. So far, we have found those that were using AI tended to confess when confronted with the evidence.It's becoming a real problem. I've seen genuinely impressive photographs dismissed as "AI" simply because they're too clean, too well-lit, or perfectly timed.
Instead of assuming an image is AI-generated, I think it's better to ask about the workflow, camera settings, or editing process. Years of practice, patience, and good post-processing can produce results that look almost unbelievable.
Great photography shouldn't be considered fake just because it's exceptional.
I completely agree. In professional photography, the final image is often the result of much more than just pressing the shutter button. Camera skills, lighting knowledge, years of experience, and careful post-processing all play a major role in creating a polished result.It is a problem for International and National Salons which probably do not allow AI in their competitions. It does now mean some of the best images come under close scrutiny as it can be difficult to identify AI with certainty. So far, we have found those that were using AI tended to confess when confronted with the evidence.
Dave
These days, if you post process at all it's getting hard to avoid AI... I think complete bans on using it are going to be hard to have.It is a problem for International and National Salons which probably do not allow AI in their competitions. It does now mean some of the best images come under close scrutiny as it can be difficult to identify AI with certainty. So far, we have found those that were using AI tended to confess when confronted with the evidence.
Dave
I've mentioned it before, but some high-end commercial clients are asking for the photographs to be made using film AND asking for a BTS (behind the scenes) video that they can promote along with the advert to "prove" the advert imagery is real (according to Tin House Studios).Will we go back to slightly blurred, slightly out of focus black and white photography?![]()
Am I the only one seeing posts that are almost certainly AI generated?
Photographic evidence in criminal cases has always required an evidence trail, I doubt AI is able to provide that.Where I see this new technology causing a problem, is in the legal system.
A great deal of both criminal and civil litigation now relies on photographic evidence, of one form or another. For decades, such evidence was considered reliable but artificial intelligence tools, which can be used by untrained people, are going to cause considerable problems by removing that trust.
Photographic evidence in criminal cases has always required an evidence trail, I doubt AI is able to provide that.
I doubt it would ever pass the evidence trail.It could be generated at need, though possibly not based in reality.
I doubt it would ever pass the evidence trail.
Or, worse still, get someone acquitted when they are actually guilty?Possibly, but that might not matter if it was enough to get someone arrested.
Possibly, but that might not matter if it was enough to get someone arrested.
Or, worse still, get someone acquitted when they are actually guilty?
It might be enough to get someone arrested, but as @gramps says, it’ll never be enough to get to court, where the barrier to admission is so much higher.
Evidence requirements are evidence requirements, whether photographic, CCTV, or forensic. They aren’t subject to whether someone wants to believe. And I’m responding to court requirements as that was the original point.Hopefully that's true. But I would also worry, if circumstances have been contrived enough to get someone arrested a couple of times on suspected rape, for example, would there begin to be a 'no smoke without fire' view of them. I could imagine this would be an ideal ploy for removal of opposition even if it never led to a prosecutions (like the list of names being given to Burnham of MPs and staff accused of sexual abuse etc).
I've mentioned it before, but some high-end commercial clients are asking for the photographs to be made using film AND asking for a BTS (behind the scenes) video that they can promote along with the advert to "prove" the advert imagery is real (according to Tin House Studios).
Lots of processes on image editing is labelled AI but it is not. For example reconstruction part of your image based on pixels with your image is usually allowed but if the pixels are brought in from elsewhere the it is not allowed as you do not own the copyright. We are having to explain to some of our club members which processes/filters on LR/PS are allowed and which are not. If we give up on not allowing AI in amateur competitions, I would give up photography. I feel confident that we will have some good AI identifying apps soon; the existing apps are not accurate enough.These days, if you post process at all it's getting hard to avoid AI... I think complete bans on using it are going to be hard to have.
I'm not entirely certain that would be a bad thing as focusing on "the art" rather than the IQ/methodology seems more to the point for most genres... of course that is also far more subjective. I.e. AI might make some things "easier," but it certainly doesn't make it "artistic" or "better."