when they arose the first image-generating AIsmost of them specialized in human faces (do you remember ThisPersonNotExists?) we found the level of realism that this technology had reached incredible… despite the fact that a careful eye was still able to spot the mistakes if you knew what to look for.
However, now, in the era of DALL-E 2, Midjourney and Stable Diffusion, where artificial images have become virtually indistinguishable from real ones (and not just when it comes to rendering faces), there are hardly any tricks beyond intuition that we can resort tor to differentiate them. And for that reason, trying it is an even greater challenge.
ZAO, the Chinese MOBILE APP that through DEEPFAKE turns you into DICAPRIO in SECONDS
Will you get to add 10 points? (We haven’t made it)
‘Which Is AI?’ is a website that challenges us to try precisely that: to show you six pictures (five, sometimes) and that you have to find out which of them has been generated by an AI (Specifically, by Stable Diffusion, since the ‘artificial’ images of the game are taken from the Lexica.Art gallery/search engine).
On the other hand, the real images (with a theme always similar to that of Lexica) are obtained from one of the most popular image banks on the Internet, the Unsplash portal.
Try https://t.co/gxZDNpz9n2 – A simple game where you find an AI-generated image out of a list of real images.
See if you can get a score above 10.
I am guessing the game will get harder as images improve in the near future
AI images from https://t.co/f12CAwnJ4T pic.twitter.com/lcKPCDrmN1
— Josh Bickett (@josh_bickett) November 21, 2022
The game’s creator, Josh Bickett, states that, from his point of view, “drawings and paintings are very difficult [de identificar] right now, landscape images are somewhat difficult, but animals are very easy.” Although the truth is that all images would be much easier to assess if they weren’t so small, which hides the most revealing details.
“I will make the project open source so that others can help if they are interested. Let me know if anyone wants to review the code,” it read a week ago. But don’t worry, you won’t need to warn him: the code for ‘Which Is AI?’ already has its own public repository on GitHub.