Submitted by Illustrious_Row_9971 t3_10nxqfg in MachineLearning
HermanCainsGhost t1_j6ds2pp wrote
Reply to comment by Low_Basil9900 in [R] InstructPix2Pix: Learning to Follow Image Editing Instructions by Illustrious_Row_9971
I mean then you find AI gross generally… and thus, why are you here?
Low_Basil9900 t1_j6erauj wrote
I don't. It's a useful tool. Im interested in learning how it works so i can understand what I'm being presented with - specifically when it comes to segmentation and feature identification in images.
I just feel physically repulsed by the output from the Art.
The textures, the colours, the composites between different images to produce the final result. They make me really uncomfortable. It's a physical sensation.
HermanCainsGhost t1_j6iy9fn wrote
Sounds like an issue you should talk to your psychologist about. I certainly feel no physical sensation when looking at AI art (or any art) beyond "oh this looks good" or "this looks ugly" (if those even count as physical sensations).
It's very weird to have such a visceral feeling of disgust just based on looking at art.
> the composites between different images to produce the final result
Lol, that's not how AI art works. Are you sure you're in the right place? See that's the problem being in a space like this - you are very likely talking to someone who actually knows how things work.
AI art works by denoising, it isn't a "composite". It isn't "mixing images". It doesn't have images to mix.
Stable Diffusion for example, was trained on 240 terabytes of data - 2.3 billion 512x512 images, and the models are between 2 to 8 gigabytes of data. That means equivalent to about 1-4 bytes of data per image (with a 512x512 image being a bit bigger than 250 kilobytes in total size).
Suffice to say, you cannot compress 250,000 bytes of data into 1-4 bytes of data (mathematically, it is impossible). If that level of compression was possible, that would be the bigger story compared to AI art, because data transmission just got a wholllllllllleeeeeee lot faster, by orders of magnitude.
So yeah, get out of here with that "composite" nonsense. There's no composite. It's literally mathematically impossible for there to be a composite.
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