In the winter of 2018, Icelandic photographer Rebekka Guðleifsdóttir wanted to show her partner, who was away in the capital, how much it had snowed overnight at their home and posted a photo of herself on FB #WomensArt ❄️

Background on the photo:
https://icelandmonitor.mbl.is/news/culture_and_living/2018/02/13/icelander_hangs_out_washing_in_shoulder_deep_snow/

@carl @Natasha_Jay

It's not just that she's in a T-shit. It's that while in a T-shirt, she supposedly walked through all that, effortlessly pushing her body through the snow, and looks perfectly comfortable.

It is, most certainly, AI.

@Linux @carl @Natasha_Jay The photo is from Winter 2018. Remember how just two years ago you could tell that an image was “AI” because the number of limbs and extremities did not match the number of people in the image? This image is five years older than that. It cannot possibly be AI generated.

Stop calling every amazing feat “AI”. It destroys trust just as much as actual AI images do.

@ArtHarg @carl @Natasha_Jay

AI, photoshopped --- It's still fake either way.

@Linux @carl @Natasha_Jay Is it so difficult for you to accept that people can tolerate cold? Why do you insist that the photo is fake? How do you know?

@ArtHarg @carl @Natasha_Jay

Before we even talk about the girl, let's focus on the physics of the path.