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#ai food
wensdaiambrose · 14 days
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Ok it's that time again for me to say that AI is used by scammers on social media.
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Can you point out what is wrong with these ai images?
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Cause your grandma on Facebook can't.
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Notice the repeated text?
The similar themes?
The lack of hands in every "first cake" photo?
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Yes, a lot of the likes and comments are from other spam or scam accounts, but not all of them.
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Teach the people in your life how to spot AI art and how to spot scammer and spam accounts.
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ai-conceptualist · 19 days
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This is my first AI image submission here in Tumblr. With more people exploring the opportunities provided by generative AI, I hope I'll be able to make the most out of this new technology. Please look forward to seeing more stuff from me in the near future.
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pleasure-paragon-art · 2 months
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This should be at every bedside before sex 😂🤣😂. You know you get hungry....I sure as fuck do. You get to stay in bed much longer if you have one 😜.
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jetzerzabel · 26 days
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Periwinkle Pasta
Source:
Theamazinglee
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deepdreamnights · 1 year
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Cosmic Pastry
Top pastry scientists are researching ways of reproducing them at non-cosmic scales.
Prompt: a close up of a pastry with stars in the background, a digital rendering, hurufiyya, tardigrade in space, condorito, intricate a whole fantasy leaf, nasa photo, very very very epic, wafflehouse, hecate, actual photo, cinnamon, panini, in the universe --ar 3:2
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shawnfromportland · 2 years
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"a screenshot of a recipe website for an award-winning kale-based dish"
from my first day generating with mdjourney, i was trying to get a sense for how many levels deep in complexity it could reasonably handle. screenshots of certain types of content are no problem for it. i used generations of variations until i got this recipe suggestion i wanted to attempt to make IRL now
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thanxgoth · 6 months
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If only this AI-generated soup were real ...
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raghavgg123 · 7 months
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Dall-E 2 is way too realistic. Makes me want to eat but can't ofc.
Prompt: Junk Food with every junk food possible, pop art
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jojo-schmo · 2 months
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How to turn off AI Training of your content on Web and Mobile:
On a Web Browser:
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I had some trouble finding this option. My first instinct was to click the settings button on the left, but that's where it is!
First, you'll click the name of your blog on the left sidebar to bring it up on your browser.
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Then click "Blog settings" on the right sidebar once your blog is brought up. That's where they're hiding it.
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Click "Prevent Third-Party Sharing" under the Visibility section, and bam! You're done.
On Mobile:
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Thankfully it's much easier on mobile. Just click the Gear icon on your blog's page, to go to settings.
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Scroll all the way down until you see Visibility, then toggle the Prevent third-party sharing option for your blog!!
If you disable this setting on mobile, it automatically synced it to my web browser settings, too. ...But if you use both Web and Mobile, I would still highly recommend double checking that it actually turned off on both!!
Check that it's turned off on your side blogs too! And check your settings every now and then anyway to ensure that it's staying turned off, because if my memory serves right, some other websites will pull some shenanigans on things like this and opt you back in without telling you!
Leave Feedback on New Features at Tumblr Support Here!! Let Staff know however we can that having our content fed to AI at their whim is unacceptable.
And if you have the option to poison your art with Nightshade or Glaze, keep it up!!
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oracle-fae · 2 months
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bed of lettuce
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ai-conceptualist · 19 days
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Some people prefer eating breakfast like an emperor, lunch like a prince, and dinner like a pauper.
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prokopetz · 8 months
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Imagine a Star Trek type food replicator that lacks an internal library of approved outputs and instead uses a generative language model to figure out what you're asking for. People having to do Midjourney-style prompt crafting to get the meals they want out of it. Abusing the system by describing things that absolutely are not food in ways which circumvent the safeguards. Occasionally it produces something that tries to eat you back which it insists with perfect confidence is in fact a strawberry crumble.
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aifood · 1 year
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Hotdog pizza! created with hotpot ai
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rebeccathenaturalist · 9 months
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ETA: I wrote up a guide on clues that a foraging book was written by AI here!
[Original Tweet source here.]
[RANT AHEAD]
Okay, yeah. This is a very, very, very bad idea. I understand that there is a certain flavor of techbro who has ABSOLUTELY zero problem with this because "AI is the future, bro", and we're supposed to be reading their articles on how to use AI for side hustles and all that.
I get that ID apps have played into people's tendency to want quick and easy answers to everything (I'm not totally opposed to apps, but please read about how an app does not a Master Naturalist make.) But nature identification is serious stuff, ESPECIALLY when you are trying to identify whether something is safe to eat, handle, etc. You have to be absolutely, completely, 100000% sure of your ID, and then you ALSO have to absolutely verify that it is safely handled and consumed by humans.
As a foraging instructor, I cannot emphasize this enough. My classes, which are intended for a general audience, are very heavy on identification skills for this very reason. I have had (a small subsection of) students complain that I wasn't just spending 2-3 hours listing off bunches of edible plants and fungi, and honestly? They can complain all they want. I am doing MY due diligence to make very sure that the people who take my classes are prepared to go out and start identifying species and then figure out their edibility or lack thereof.
Because it isn't enough to be able to say "Oh, that's a dandelion, and I think this might be an oyster mushroom." It's also not enough to say "Well, such-and-such app says this is Queen Anne's lace and not poison hemlock." You HAVE to have incredibly keen observational skills. You HAVE to be patient enough to take thorough observations and run them through multiple forms of verification (field guides, websites, apps, other foragers/naturalists) to make sure you have a rock-solid identification. And then you ALSO have to be willing to read through multiple sources (NOT just Wikipedia) to determine whether that species is safely consumed by humans, and if so if it needs to be prepared in a particular way or if there are inedible/toxic parts that need to be removed.
AND--this phenomenon of AI-generated crapola emphasizes the fact that in addition to all of the above, you HAVE to have critical thinking skills when it comes to assessing your sources. Just because something is printed on a page doesn't mean it's true. You need to look at the quality of the information being presented. You need to look at the author's sources. You need to compare what this person is saying to other books and resources out there, and make sure there's a consensus.
You also need to look at the author themselves and make absolutely sure they are a real person. Find their website. Find their bio. Find their social media. Find any other manners in which they interact with the world, ESPECIALLY outside of the internet. Contact them. Ask questions. Don't be a jerk about it, because we're just people, but do at least make sure that a book you're interested in buying is by a real person. I guarantee you those of us who are serious about teaching this stuff and who are internet-savvy are going to make it very easy to find who we are (within reason), what we're doing, and why.
Because the OP in that Tweet is absolutely right--people are going to get seriously ill or dead if they try using AI-generated field guides. We have such a wealth of information, both on paper/pixels and in the brains of active, experienced foragers, that we can easily learn from the mistakes of people in the past who got poisoned, and avoid their fate. But it does mean that you MUST have the will and ability to be impeccably thorough in your research--and when in doubt, throw it out.
My inbox is always open. I'm easier caught via email than here, but I will answer. You can always ask me stuff about foraging, about nature identification, etc. And if there's a foraging instructor/author/etc. with a website, chances are they're also going to be more than willing to answer questions. I am happy to direct you to online groups on Facebook and elsewhere where you have a whole slew of people to compare notes with. I want people's foraging to be SAFE and FUN. And AI-generated books aren't the way to make that happen.
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aiweirdness · 3 months
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asked chatgpt4 to have dalle3 generate "a cross section of a gourmet chocolate with each layer labeled."
more
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