The first thing people saw when they searched Google for the artist Hieronymus Bosch was an AI-generated version of his Garden of Earthly Delights, one of the most famous paintings in art history.

Depending on what they are searching for, Google Search sometimes serves users a series of images above the list of links they usually see in results. As first spotted by a user on Twitter, when people searched for “Hieronymus Bosch” on Google, it included a couple of images from the real painting, but the first and largest image they saw was an AI-generated version of it.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Regardless of how the image was generated, why is Google treating a random blogspam site as the authoritative version of a work of art over (say) Wikipedia?

    According to the article:

    As 404 Media has reported in January, Google is regularly surfacing AI-generated websites that game search engine optimization before the human-made websites they are trained on. “Our focus when ranking content is on the quality of the content, rather than how it was produced,” Google told 404 Media in a statement at the time.

    Does that mean I can search for any famous image, take the largest existing version, upscale it by 1% and post it on my own site, and instantly be featured at the top of google searches?

    • Stovetop@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Because Wikipedia doesn’t serve ads or pay Google, so Google doesn’t like to make them the top result for a lot of searches they should be.

      • nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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        3 months ago

        So, yes you can get to the top of image searches that way, but you also have to add google ads to your page so that google can get a second hit of revenue it drives users to your page, serves the ad, and changes the advertiser.

    • Chee_Koala@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      It’s because this guy https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prabhakar_Raghavan thinks that keeping people engaged on google search longer is what it is all about. Not finding what you search for, no, engagement with your search tool.

      "He was the head of search for Yahoo from 2005 through 2012 — a tumultuous period that cemented its terminal decline, and effectively saw the company bow out of the search market altogether. His responsibilities? Research and development for Yahoo’s search and ads products.

      When Raghavan joined the company, Yahoo held a 30.4 percent market share — not far from Google’s 36.9%, and miles ahead of the 15.7% of MSN Search. By May 2012, Yahoo was down to just 13.4 percent and had shrunk for the previous nine consecutive months, and was being beaten even by the newly-released Bing. That same year, Yahoo had the largest layoffs in its corporate history, shedding nearly 2,000 employees — or 14% of its overall workforce. " - https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-men-who-killed-google/

      • elooto@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        As a Yahoo! employee at that time, this is simply not true. The links don’t provide any info on how he wrecked Yahoo! Search. It sounds like someone is trying to pin Google’s search downfall on him, and made a wild assumption about Yahoo!.

  • CosmoNova@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    On one hand that’s catastrophic and an insult to the art world and art history. On the other hand it’s unsurprising. Does anyone expect google to show relevant top results in this day and age?

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    3 months ago

    Google Serves AI Slop as Top Result for One of the Most Famous Paintings in History

  • Ricky Rigatoni@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    I was completely onboard with AI when it was mostly just a bunch of nerds making pictures of weird dogs but the more I see corporations abusing us with it the more I hate it.

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    3 months ago

    AI “art” removes the hurdle for the wealthy of actually having talent to produce “art”, while simultaneously removing the artist’s ability to produce wealth from their talents.

    Everytime someone shares an AI generated video, song, picture, etc., I cringe a little. Its just not good, or at best, anything that couldn’t be produced by a reasonably capable artist, but hey at least its free, right?

  • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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    3 months ago

    This is “technology news and articles?”

    Seems like this place is increasingly just people yelling at AI-generated clouds.

    • PrivacyDingus@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      the world’s most-used search engine prioritising an AI-generated slop version of a very famous painting is very much “technology news and articles” imo

    • catloaf@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      Sort of. I feel like I report half the posts around here because they’re neither news nor articles.

    • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      Im betting these now daily mindless “hey look AI did sumptin silly” articles only serve to drive more traffic to Gemini.

    • CosmoNova@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Which perfectly exposes the problems of showing AI slob to people who try to learn and extend their horizons.

      • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        3 months ago

        It’s just a painting, it’s not exactly science or history or philosophy or any knowledge that can extend one’s horizons, it’s more about a choice of mobile wallpaper, and I’m not enough of a consoomer “slob” to care about that.

        • kat_angstrom@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Expanding ones horizons absolutely does and should include art history, which is a part of human history.

          • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            3 months ago

            Meh. Art history - sure! Books, writing, films, music.

            Paintings though are a bit more dodgy. Most of the ‘classical’ paintings (in the renaissance and baroque periods) were created through a system of patronage by monarchs, if not for a selfish ego-boost of endless royal portraiture, then as a strategic move to enhance the prestige of the monarchy to it’s neighbours.

            Of course, music is often guilty of this too. Bach’s famous struggles with securing patronage for instance, but due to its more abstract nature, it is probably a better source of information about the author than a painting about the painter.

            It will hardly inform you of what the people or the world was like at the time, but rather what the monarchs wanted to project, which of course is helpful too for understanding the political situation at the time, but it’s hardly an efficient way to acquire that information, nor do the ideas gained from such exploration likely to lead to concrete conclusions.

            Kind of like judging a people by their government’s propaganda department commissions.

            What is interesting though is the fact that AI art, and the LAION-5B dataset used to train the models is a true and earnest reflection of sorts of what images today really are, from works of art to private commissions for furries etc to plain stock photos and other corporate graphics.

            It’s an interesting reality check to compare the kinds of images your mind conjures connected to an idea and the kinds of images stable diffusion produces instead, it’s revealing of one’s biases in a very unique way.

            • kat_angstrom@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              While your points about the patronage system and its weaknesses are valid, you’re writing off several centuries worth of legitimate human endeavor because the systems that enabled it were dodgy. Guess what though? That’s literally all of history, dodgy AF, featuring an intrepid cast of characters more awful the deeper you look. That doesn’t make the art or music worth writing off though.

              But honestly:

              What is interesting though is the fact that AI art, and the LAION-5B dataset used to train the models is a true and earnest reflection of sorts of what images today really are

              “Earnest” is definitely not the word you’re looking for. Derivative, maybe, because you said it yourself, they’re reflections; and as such, they’re going to reflect what images of today are; like you said. That makes them derivative, and I feel a vast artificiality that makes my heart sink when I look at the vast majority of them.

              Choosing machine-created art over historical art is choosing a passing fad over centuries of culture. It’s your right; but to write off history with a wave of the hand means you’re missing out on truly expanding your horizons.

              • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                3 months ago

                Guess what though? That’s literally all of history, dodgy AF, featuring an intrepid cast of characters more awful the deeper you look. That doesn’t make the art or music worth writing off though.

                Not at all, but as an accurate representation of who felt what? Yeah it’s not the best source. Music is also specifically less so, because it’s too abstract to really be propagandistic apart from the vague aesthetic of grandiosity.

                “Earnest” is definitely not the word you’re looking for.

                It very much is, actually.

                Earnest [adjective] - resulting from or showing sincere and intense conviction.

                A sincere intense conviction in gathering a generic dataset representative of the very broad concept of “images” in order to be the source from which future researchers can train a diffuser model as a proof of concept, to create patterns represented in those images out of randomised noise, driven by scientific pursuit and uncontaminated with the subjectivity of artistic taste is about as fitting for “earnest” as can be.

                Remember, I wasn’t talking about only the outputs of any given model, but the dataset itself.

                Derivative, maybe, because you said it yourself, they’re reflections; and as such, they’re going to reflect what images of today are; like you said.

                Yeah, the outputs definitely are, but derivative of an earnest representation of us. That makes it an interesting and unbiased account of what our images really are like.

                It’s interesting to go on SD and consider an idea, a concept, and what image it conjures in your head, then proompt and see what kind of images it conjures from the model. The difference is the difference in bias. It’s an interesting reality check.

                That makes them derivative

                So is most human works. If anything, the randomness of noise, even by processor’s famously incapable of any such thing, is going to be far more unpredictable than the copying done by humans.

                In itself though I don’t think that inherently makes either less valuable, all originality only exists as both an evolution of and in contrast to the established and accepted, and that is achieved by derivative works, perhaps even creating a genre.

                If anything, part of the problem is that AI art is too original, sometimes inventing 6 fingers, or 7, the form is broken, and the idea of any image no longer resonates.

                and I feel a vast artificiality that makes my heart sink when I look at the vast majority of them.

                Personally I don’t. I don’t think there’s anything that makes them any more artificial than any human work.

                Ultimately all are a human vision - an image generator is just a lot of fancy matrices in a file without human input, neither it nor Photoshop can make everything by themselves.

                All are ultimately .jpegs, products not of some singular vision but also of the tools developed and available to the human, all are concepts so far removed from nature, labeling one artificial but not the other is splitting hairs on a head freshly and cleanly shaved by a precision engineered mass manufactured machine shipped half-way across the world in system so complex most people don’t understand it.

                Choosing machine-created art over historical art is choosing a passing fad over centuries of culture.

                Oh come on now. You can hate AI without resorting to delusion or ignorance.

                Not only is AI art on the rise, but even a year or two ago the tools for generating images were good enough that it’s already seeing noticeable widespread use, including in the physical world. And that’s not even touching on the strides and accomplishments in the LLM space.

                It’s your right; but to write off history with a wave of the hand means you’re missing out on truly expanding your horizons.

                I’m not writing anything off as is hopefully evident by my writing here, it’s moreso that the value of it as I see it is perhaps overestimated by yourself.

        • PrivacyDingus@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          it’s pretty rich in history as a lot of famous (and not-so-famous) art can be; it tells you a lot about the people living during a period, what they thought about the world, how power worked etc.

          this is a very dismissive take on this form of art as a whole, and is the kind which really does help the techbros who think that this kind of work and effort could simple be replaced by machines

        • Hydra_Fk@reddthat.com
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          3 months ago

          By “expanding ones horizons”, do you literally mean increasing your wallet size? This is a very musk brained comment.

          • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            3 months ago

            Huh? I don’t think Philosophy or History as I mentioned expands your wallet size, dafuck?

            Don’t compare me to that techbro transphobe moron just because I’m offering a vaguely different opinion to yours.