The student ended up with a fairer complexion, dark blonde hair and blue eyes after her Playground AI request

  • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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    1 year ago

    To be fair, I used a Chinese AI picture generator app with my face and it made it more Asian looking. It’s obvious that each software has biases towards the people who made and trained it. It’s not good, but it’s expected and happening everywhere.

    • stopthatgirl7@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      Ok, but she asked it to make her look professional and the only thing it changed was her race. Not the background, not her clothes. Last I checked, a university sweatshirt wasn’t exactly professional wear.

      • Vlyn@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        It doesn’t really matter that it was her in this image. When you put “professional” into it then you can expect something along these results:

        https://www.google.com/search?q=professional+woman

        And overall in I’d say… 7 out of 10 images this is a white woman in a Google search. So the probability is high that the training data also has a bias towards that.

        Someone in the original lemmy.nz post said they did the exact same thing, same image, same prompt, and it turned her Indian. So if you have very wide training data the result would be rather “random”. Or you have very narrow training data and the result will always be looking similar.

        Grab an app focused on an Asian audience with beauty filters for example and it will turn a white person into an Asian one. But no one complains there that the app is racist.

        • stopthatgirl7@kbin.socialOP
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          1 year ago

          Notice how not a single woman there is wearing a university sweatshirt.

          My point still stands. It didn’t touch her clothing to make it more “professional.” Just her race. It screwed up on multiple levels here.

          • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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            1 year ago

            That’s because the denoising was set low. You can tell that it did actually modify her sweatshirt and the background. The model is just not able to turn her sweatshirt into a blazer, and keep her face relatively similar.

            To do this kind of editing, you add noise to the image and get the model to remove the noise, painting in new details. To fully change clothes, you would have to add so much noise that you would lose the original image entirely and end up getting a completely different person, background, pose, everything.

            We shouldn’t be surprised that race changed. The model didn’t know what race she was in the first place. It was just told to ‘change the image according to these prompts’ with about this |_| much wiggle room.

      • jet@hackertalks.com
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        1 year ago

        Machine learning is biased towards its training data. If the image generation algorithm (notice I’m not saying AI) is trained on photos of “” professionals " being of a certain demographic that’s what it will prefer when it’s generating an image.

        So these shocking exposés should simply be this image generator was trained with biased data. But the human condition is building biases. So we’re never really going to get away from that.

      • Zarxrax@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Playground AI founder Suhail Doshi said that “models aren’t instructable like that” and will pick “any generic thing based on the prompt.” However, he said in another tweet that Playground AI is “quite displeased with this and hope to solve it.”

        So the model wasn’t even designed to be used in the way she was trying to use it.

        Half of the outrage against ai models can be attributed to the users not even understanding what they are doing. Like when people complain about ChatGPT giving wrong information, when warnings about it are written right there on the page where users are typing in their prompts.

  • EatMyDick@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    “Asian MIT grad who knows exactly what she is doing, pretends to be shocked after intentionally triggering industry known bias that are already acknowledged and being worked on”

    This is just a student manufacturing controversy ensuring she has a great talking piece at her interviews.

      • EatMyDick@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah I’m sure this is the first time this MIT computer science grad had noooooo idea what she was doing.

  • Blamemeta@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    You have to pick the model that fits you, and specify what you want. This is how ai works mathematically, it trends towards one image,

    Its like buying foundation randomly and being upset it doesn’t fit your skin tone perfectly.

  • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    There’s been huge discussion on this already: https://lemmy.nz/post/684888

    Sorry, not sure how to ! post so it opens in your instance.

    TL;DR

    Any result is going to be biased. If it generated a crab wearing liederhosen, it’s obviously a bias towards crabs. You can’t not have a biased output because the prompting is controlling the bias. There’s no cause for concern here. The model is outputting by default the general trend of the data it was trained with. If it was trained with crabs, it would be generating crab-like images.

    You can fix bias with LoRAs and good prompting.

    • cerevant@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The bias isn’t in the software, it is in the data. The stock photos of professional women that were fed in were white.

      That doesn’t say anything about the AI, but rather the community that created those biases.

      • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I recall a somewhat similar incident when I was showing an in-law of mine how Stable Diffusion worked a while back. She’s of Indian descent, and she asked Stable Diffusion to generate a picture of an Indian woman. All of the women it generated had Bindis and other “traditional” Indian cultural garb on, and she was initially kind of annoyed by that. But I explained that that’s because most of the photos of women in the training set that were explicitly tagged as Indian were dressed that way, whereas the rest of the Indian women in the training set probably weren’t explicitly tagged. They were just women.

        It was kind of interesting trying to figure out which option was more biased. Realizing that there was an understandable reason behind that helped ease her annoyance.

      • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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        1 year ago

        Yes, but they trained on easily accessible data in large amounts. Which actually says that stock photo websites are the biased ones there.

        No model can be trained on an equal amount of diverse data for everyone, and it’s not supposed to anyway. I bet it was hardly if at all trained on Mongolian goat herders, but you could hardly say it’s biased against them, just that there wasn’t an easily accessible large amount of pictures of them.

        • cerevant@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s my point. The AI isn’t an independent subject to be criticized, it is a cultural mirror.

    • Fubber Nuckin'@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Just, you know, as long as that profile isn’t for some site whose sole purpose is allowing others to identify you for your career.

  • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I mean wouldn’t this just be due to like the sheer number of BS “female professional” stock photos used on the websites of call centers globally, that the AI ingested? Said “professional white person” photos being used especially in non-western websites in order to gain legitimacy in the west?

    Like given what little I know about how AI ingests and spits out data, it might be correlating the buzzword “professional”, and stock photos of white people that were ingested from Asian websites. It might be “wrong” but the AI doesn’t attempt to be “right” it’s just trying to give you what you expect based on the data it has.