Comment on TikTok ran a deepfake ad of an AI MrBeast hawking iPhones for $2 — and it's the 'tip of the iceberg'
SoaringDE@feddit.de 1 year agoYeah I’m at a loss aswell. Is it a way to prove the source of a video?
Comment on TikTok ran a deepfake ad of an AI MrBeast hawking iPhones for $2 — and it's the 'tip of the iceberg'
SoaringDE@feddit.de 1 year agoYeah I’m at a loss aswell. Is it a way to prove the source of a video?
wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one 1 year ago
Its AI poison. You alter the data in such a way that the image is unchanged to a humans visual eye, but when imaging AI software uses the image within its sample imaging, the alterations ruin its ability to make correlations and recognize patterns.
Its toxic for the entire data set too, so it can damage the AI output of most things as long as its within the list of images used to train the AI.
p03locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 year ago
That seems about as effective as those No-AI pictures artists like to pretend will poison AI data sets. A few pixels isn’t going to fool AI, and anything more than that is going to look like a real image was AI-generated, ironically.
wildginger@lemmy.myserv.one 1 year ago
It can seem like whatever you want it to, its already been used and has poisoned data sets.
p03locke@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 year ago
Wake me up when orgs like Stability AI or Open AI bitch about this technology. As it stands now, it’s not even worth mentioning, and people are freely generating whatever pictures, models, deepfakes, etc. that they want.