• jerebear39@slrpnk.net
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    3 days ago

    Wasn’t this meme AI? I remember seeing this back on twitter… Don’t remember for sure if it was, it’s still funny tho lol

    • violet08_@lemmy.worldOP
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      3 days ago

      no idea honestly i just came across it while scrolling

      side note but omg fuck ai i’m so tired of this shit😭

    • Yosmonkol@piefed.social
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      2 days ago

      This is an edit of an edit. Here is a less cropped version from a tiktok that I’m pretty sure uses ai to swap faces. It has a volume button baked into the bottom right corner so its not using the original base image either. I could have sworn there was a version on reddit/imgur that was older but I can’t find it.

      uybyb7c6XozYZid.jpg

    • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Very hard to get an AI to make an image that consistently blurred. Very likely a real photo.

        • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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          3 days ago

          Difficult to do it in a way that is physically consistent with a camera lens/sensor.

          I don’t see any of the expected issues with AI (garbled text, impossible geometry, strange anatomy, etc) in this picture. Of course it’s quite possible to just edit a portion of an existing picture with AI, and it will match the rest. So I may have been overstating the difficulty.

          • Wolf314159@startrek.website
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            3 days ago

            Difficult to do it in a way that is physically consistent with a camera lens/sensor.

            That’s really not true at all. Lots of photo software has precise metrics on a multitude of actual camera lenses specifically to compensate (remove) for the inherent optical properties of said lenses. Using those same metrics to mimic the optical properties of those lenses, rather that remove them, is also fairly common. The optical properties of the sensors are obviously also well known, otherwise digital photography simply wouldn’t work. This photo may or may not be AI, but the existence of blurring neither proves nor excludes either possibility.