#photography
@Iloo It’s very likely AI horseshit, unfortunately.
https://www.dodho.com/roberto-brunetti-alchemy-and-algorithms-speaking-to-the-unconscious/
It was one of those days that I would call the same as a thousand others, when we immerse ourselves in socials to postpone the tediousness of real life. Sometimes I believe that Meta's algorithm perceives our moods; perhaps it measures the pressure with which we touch the screen of our mobile phone and, through an artificial intelligence, assigns it a precise mood.
@nilsmielke That’s because it’s not. It’s AI horseshit.
https://www.dodho.com/roberto-brunetti-alchemy-and-algorithms-speaking-to-the-unconscious/
It was one of those days that I would call the same as a thousand others, when we immerse ourselves in socials to postpone the tediousness of real life. Sometimes I believe that Meta's algorithm perceives our moods; perhaps it measures the pressure with which we touch the screen of our mobile phone and, through an artificial intelligence, assigns it a precise mood.
@oscherler Thanks for making me aware.
That is just horrible, then.
@nilsmielke Honestly, I hate how it makes me suspicious of every nice or surprising picture or video that I see.
This one, I wouldn’t have questioned it if it was tagged as a painting instead of a photograph. The only things that would make me question it as a painting is the man’s head obstructing the boat, it’s a slightly weird composition decision, and the top right window that’s almost completely cut, but that could be a crop of the original.
“His creative process often starts with real photographs […] reworked through AI, where error is an integral part of the result. There are no montages. Everything is born within the generative engine, fed by complex prompts, as if Brunetti were feeding the machine his unconscious.”
https://www.dodho.com/roberto-brunetti-alchemy-and-algorithms-speaking-to-the-unconscious/
It was one of those days that I would call the same as a thousand others, when we immerse ourselves in socials to postpone the tediousness of real life. Sometimes I believe that Meta's algorithm perceives our moods; perhaps it measures the pressure with which we touch the screen of our mobile phone and, through an artificial intelligence, assigns it a precise mood.