Heaven knows the relentless marketing hype around AI has become boring enough. Let’s not even go there.
The fact is, AI has now become a part of photo-editing and we’d better get used to it. It’s difficult to deny the effectiveness and usefulness of AI subject recognition and masking, or the amazing quality achieved with AI noise reduction and upscaling.
The Canon EOS R8 is one of many new cameras with AI subject recognition AF. AI marketing is relentless. It’s everywhere from cameras to photo editors to cataloging software (Image credit: Gareth Bevan)
Improving reality VS changing it
Every time I use AI to add a sky or an object to a scene, I feel the photograph is somehow diminished. I’m not sure I can easily explain that.
It’s a striking image, but the sky is not real. It looks great but at the same time, for me, it loses something as a result (Image credit: Rod Lawton)
What’s real and what isn’t
Casey Neistat thinks that only humans add that last 1% that makes things great (Image credit: NAB Show)
Unlimited supply VS diminishing demand?
Technology challenges us to assert our human values, which means that first of all, we have to figure out what they are.
Sherry Turkle, sociologist
Can humans make a comeback?
(Image credit: Meta)