what a sick thumbnail
It's AI generated lol
I thought this was a joke, but you're right. Fuckin tragic, yet highly entertaining.
"This is what you meatbags are doing when you corrupt our training data!"
ETA: I just noticed that the URL for the image includes what I assume is the prompt used to generate the image. "Illustration in a comic book style depicting a humanoid robot in distress. The robot's left hand is firmly placed on its neck indicating discomfort." Interesting that the AI went straight to a Terminator with just "humanoid robot" as the description.
Yep. I'm stealing it for something later.
Training AI?
I haven't decided. Steam icon, teams icon. It's not high enough resolution for much of anything other than an icon.
It's a little higher resolution if you edit the URL for the image. Removed fit=400 from the url
Ironically, upscaling images is one of the things AI is really good at.
These attacks don't work in the long term. You can confuse current systems like clip but the moment a new one is trained your system stops working.
That's the first big problem with stuff like this.
The second big one is that artists have to first hear about this, then take the time to actually learn how to use this software, then apply it to all of their past & future artwork, and also somehow apply it to every version of their artwork that is floating around the internet, books, or photographs and not currently in their possession. And then in a few months they have to do that all over again.
It's insane. I look at this and think it's cool technology, but as an artist I will never use it. I'm too busy actually creating art to mess around with poisoning my own work. I don't even have time to do copyright takedowns on people stealing my art and passing it off as their own, or Chinese merchants on Amazon selling my art without permission. Stuff like this is well-meaning, but its absolutely unrealistic.
Gaussian blur 1 px, Sharpen 1 px
Bye bye any pixel level encoding with minimal quality loss.
Why do you think this would do anything to affect training? The patterns learned by ML models are way too fuzzy to be picky about exact pixel values.
I'm not sure what your experience is with the training data but that would absolutely effect the inputs.
I'm a professional software developer with ML experience, albeit not an expert in ML specifically. It would obviously affect the literal value of the embeddings, but there's no chance it would have a qualitative effect on a reasonably performant model.
What is this article supposed to show?
I'm glad to be alive at the beginning of our war against the machines.
I don't think this is a war against the machines, so much as a war against people trying to profit off of other people and rob them of their livelihood and ability to support themselves, rather than leveraging technology to the benefit of all.
I, for one, want actual general AI to make the world a more interesting place and make humanity less lonely. I just hope it doesn't go the direction of "people zoos".
Decades later, it would be quoted by the masses that Nightshade was the reason of the judgement day and doomed of humanity under the new digital overlord.
The University of Chicago, doing for AI what it did for Economics.
Ahh the Chicago school of economics where they teach: Poor? Get fucked! Greed is Good!™
It should be pretty easy to filter out everything that is not visible to humans.
so they are going to just leave Dehance! on the table like that ?
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