![]() ![]() It’s not much of a leap to think Stable Diffusion used sections of Adamus’s photographs in some of the generated results. AI isn’t able to make something out of nothing - at least not yet - and is only able to reference actual results to create its new images. In order to create these very similar images, it’s likely that Stable Diffusion used Adamus’s photos that were scraped from the internet so that it was able to tell what his photos look like. AI image generated using Marc Adamus’s name In that case, Aurel Manea instructed Stable Diffusion to create images with the prompt “landscape photography by Marc Adamus, Glacial lake, sunset, dramatic lighting, mountains, clouds, beautiful.”Ī quick look at Adamus’s work - he is a well-known landscape photographer - confirms that the AI did throw up digitally created photorealistic results that have more than a passing resemblance to his photos. That means photographers’ images have presumably been used in a way that the owners never intended or consented to.Įarlier this week, PetaPixel published an article about beautiful landscape photos that do not exist. More likely, the process involves image-text pairing from Google searches. ![]() ![]() It seems very doubtful that companies like OpenAI have only scraped public domain and creative commons images into the algorithm. Does This Constitute Copyright Infrignement?
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