AI Generated Content - It's all terrible and unfunny.

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It takes hundreds of thousands of existing headshots of furries and AI uses them to generate new headshots. Some of these come out to look hilarious. Like this potato with eyes that appears very distressed by it's own existance:
 

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Pretty sure the consensus on these is that most of them are fake. They didn't get a bot to generate anything, they just wrote some stupid crap and try to pass it off as if a bot wrote it (it's especially obvious with that Netflix one, no way could a bot keep the story that consistent and remember the names of the people in the story and what happened, have you ever tried AI Dungeon? It forgets stuff instantly)
 
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https://thispersondoesnotexist.com/ generates very realistic portraits, but has some struggles with clothes, accessories and backgrounds. Look at this dude, everything seems fine, until you take a closer look at his neck and shirt and realize that something's wrong here.
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And it gets worse when there are people in the background.
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The only thing I can add it how those those images are created, basically imagine you add a black box that converted an image (or some other form of complex input like text) to a set of number and a second black box that converted those set of numbers into the original image.
Now you just take the input to the second box and give the numbers a little nudge, this will create (in a very high probability) something new that no one has ever seen.
 
This is an image generated in artflow.ai with the search term "Average gamer":

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That site is currently way overloaded and wants me to wait 11½ hours to see William Shatner as Captain Picard.

Here's a fun toy that runs in your browser based on neural cellular automata: https://distill.pub/selforg/2021/textures/

Two Minute Papers on YouTube has tons of content about this kind of stuff, many times with links to interactive examples in the video description.
 
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