For example, places like HistoryPorn have some bizarre pictures of weird inventions or WWII experimental weapons.

How come I’m only just now coming across them? Why didn’t we see them five or ten years ago, even in specialized forums and subreddits?

Places like ArtPorn or TraditionalArt are a trickier proposition. Here my lack of knowledge is vast, but I’ve really loved the history of painting for over two decades now, and have recently kept coming across a lot of 18th-to-20th century paintings and painters I’ve never heard of before; some of these are excellent, I should have known about them… I think. But like I say, there’s more that I don’t know than what I do.
If they are real and not recent AI creations, where are the original and who is digitizing and/or publishing so many of them all of a sudden in the past year?

  • athos77
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    fedilink
    1010 months ago

    If you want to look up an image, go to tineye.com and paste in the URL, then explore the results. (Google and I think Yandex both also have reverse image search.) The older an image is, the less likely it is to be AI. Similarly, at least at the moment, there aren’t any AI images that I know of in the major repositories like Alamy. Then if you follow the links off the reverse image search page, you can usually find something that’s been written about it; someplace like Alamy will give (as best they know) the caption, year, photographer, location, etc, of an image.

    Why are so many showing up that you’ve never seen? There are hundreds of millions of paintings and likely tens of billions of photos - how could you possibly have seen and remembered every one of them? There’s also more museums and collections that have put part of their works online, even before the pandemic; and some places put additional works online during the pandemic as a way to continue or increase patron engagement during the pandemic. Some places have also reached a slight critical mass of data when combining in the photos of previous exhibitions and such that they’ve put online.

    Finally, there’s been the whole digitizing-books effort over the past decade or so. We usually think of just the text that’s come online, but they include millions of images as well, many of which might have seen limited release previously.

    • @StaticFalconar
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      510 months ago

      +1. Yep. As much as we like to believe we have the entirety of everything already archived and there isnt anything new to discover, the world is bigger than we know.