We’re both wrong. It’s Joe Manchin.
We’re both wrong. It’s Joe Manchin.
Holy god that’s by far the worst one. Still the same gaping chasm of moral vacancy, but he looks younger and more vigorous, more capable with his greedy darkness.
(Edit: It’s Joe Manchin, a totally different crooked rich white guy who gets away with everything)
I have this totally unreasonable belief that I can sometimes tell just from looking at someone that they’re an awful person.
It was not, I will check out his human generated art though.
Whole and uninterrupted
Disclaimer: I have no real qualification on this. But it seems like this whole technology is pretty sensitive to the specific model being used and the specific details of the pixels; the whole thing is written like there’s some silver-bullet image alteration that can fool “machine vision” in general, but what it demonstrates is nothing like that.
I asked Midjourney to identify the altered images that machines are supposed to identify as a sheep or a cat or whatever, and it said:
… which is what they are.
The last two images were actually a little more interesting – they’re distorted to the point that it’s visually obvious that they’ve been altered, and Midjourney actually picks up that the image is distorted a little, and includes that in the style part of its description, while mostly-accurately describing what’s in the image. These are its full descriptions:
“a red bridge, traffic lights, and a fencedin section of street, in the style of digital mixed media, thermal camera, american realism, found object sculpture, stipple, ricoh r1, xbox 360 graphics”
“a pole with a traffic light and a van, in the style of distorted, fragmented images, manapunk, found objects, webcam photography, suburban ennui capturer, hyper-realistic bird studies, 19th century american art”
Hunter S. Thompson was right all along…
The stuff about ibogaine in “Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail '72” was in a rare category where I genuinely couldn’t tell if he was being serious or making up nonsense. Maybe it was real.
“Can we ask victims of sexual assault what they think?”
“No no no! No need. I’ll tell you all about it. Here’s the thing…”