• @[email protected]
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    101 year ago

    I’m wondering if AI can already solve this. I’m not even some crazy AI fanboy, I’m just thinking about the possibility of predictive AI being able to interpret compression artifacts to determine what forms would collapse into a particular pattern.

    • @hark
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      221 year ago

      No, but AI can be used to make up “evidence” and falsely convict people through “science”, “technology”, and “math” that people don’t understand but assume is correct because computers or something.

      • SSTF
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        21 year ago

        Have AI upscaled images been allowed as courtroom evidence?

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      There have been upscaling AIs for a few years, which can take a blurry picture and then e.g. guess that some pixels are probably hair, so it’ll swap those out for a custom rendered version of hair.

      Sometimes that works well, but you often still have Uncanny Valley stuff going on. I also certainly don’t feel like they’re better at actually interpreting low-res images than humans, not in their current state.

      And well, it should also be noted that if you prime such an AI with an image of the suspect, it will absolutely find a way to make a blurry mess of pixels look like that. So, it certainly shouldn’t serve as the only evidence.

    • HonkyTonkWoman
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      41 year ago

      Calm down there, you’re starting to sound all inquisitive & such. Like that creamsicle lookin’ fella from the show.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      There has been for some time AI image and video resolution upscaling for some time, and it works very very well. Allows zoom and “enhance” but not to the ridiculous scale we see here of course. But you can take standard CCTV footage and 4k upscale it and zoom. Its very impressive.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      This already happens. See the Samsung S23 Ultra Moon picture marketing that turned out to be a lie.