No one's ready for this --- Our basic assumptions about photos capturing reality are about to go up in smoke. [View all]
https://www.theverge.com/2024/8/22/24225972/ai-photo-era-what-is-reality-google-pixel-9
An explosion from the side of an old brick building. A crashed bicycle in a city intersection. A cockroach in a box of takeout. It took less than 10 seconds to create each of these images with the Reimagine tool in the Pixel 9s Magic Editor. They are crisp. They are in full color. They are high-fidelity. There is no suspicious background blur, no tell-tale sixth finger. These photographs are extraordinarily convincing, and they are all extremely fucking fake.
Anyone who buys a Pixel 9 the latest model of Googles flagship phone, available starting this week will have access to the easiest, breeziest user interface for top-tier lies, built right into their mobile device. This is all but certain to become the norm, with similar features already available on competing devices and rolling out on others in the near future. When a smartphone just works, its usually a good thing; here, its the entire problem in the first place.
Photography has been used in the service of deception for as long as it has existed. (Consider Victorian spirit photos, the infamous Loch Ness monster photograph, or Stalins photographic purges of IRL-purged comrades.) But it would be disingenuous to say that photographs have never been considered reliable evidence. Everyone who is reading this article in 2024 grew up in an era where a photograph was, by default, a representation of the truth. A staged scene with movie effects, a digital photo manipulation, or more recently, a deepfake these were potential deceptions to take into account, but they were outliers in the realm of possibility. It took specialized knowledge and specialized tools to sabotage the intuitive trust in a photograph. Fake was the exception, not the rule.
... lots and lots of examples ...
We briefly lived in an era in which the photograph was a shortcut to reality, to knowing things, to having a smoking gun. It was an extraordinarily useful tool for navigating the world around us. We are now leaping headfirst into a future in which reality is simply less knowable.
Personal note: I only use the Apple Preview app to adjust (not edit) photos, and from time to time, the free and open source GIMP editor to adjust white balance or edit out some power lines. I keep Darktable and RawTherapee (also free and open source) for those times (not yet encountered) where Nikon's idea of a jpeg falls short of what I envisaged, and the RAW file needs to be adjusted or edited. I use the phone for impromptu shots, like the fun ones from the thrift store or bookstore below.
It's more real and more fun UN-edited. Only cropped and lighting adjusted.
That's how I saw it.