Friday 15 September 2023

WOW, THAT’S SURREAL!

Dick Pountain /Idealog 343/ 06 Feb 2023 10:27


I freely confess that playing with the ‘Generative AI’ image service Stable Diffusion over the last few weeks has been enormous fun. And why wouldn’t it, since I’ve been using my personal computers to create images for the last 30+ years and I’m a sucker for surrealism. You should now be sensing a ‘but’ coming. But perhaps I only enjoy this experience so much because I’m an amateur and dilettante. I don’t depend on selling images for my living, and despite various feeble attempts have sold very few – I make them purely for pleasure and publish them for free on social media and my own website. The fact that Generative AI apps confer the ability to create professional-grade, photorealistic graphics – even to those who lack any drawing skills at all – is not a threat to my livelihood.  

I chose Stable Diffusion over more popular platforms like DALL-E mini, Midjourney, Deep Dream, WOMBO, Fotor and the rest (and there are lots of them) because it’s really free, doesn’t lure you into subscribing, and it’s very, very simple: you can only type in text descriptions and save such images as you like from its stream of results. That suits me just fine because I’m not intending to create a manga comic or an animated movie, and the restrictions are the whole point: I save the most outlandishly ‘wrong’ interpretations as instant surrealist pictures. I have briefly tried both Fotor and Midjourney, and came away traumatised. The latter is hosted on the schoolkid-oriented social network Discord, whose frantic user interface is the most baffling, frustrating and vaguely threatening I’ve seen since I dipped a toe into 4Chan back in 2010.

Were it only a matter of using Generative AI tools to forge Marvel-type comics or Picasso-type paintings (which they do rather well) then the people who need worry most are  illustrators and animators who risk being put out of work by greedy publishers. But actually the rest of us are equally at risk from this ability to alter the appearance of reality itself so simply. Ever since the Trump presidency we’ve become overfamiliar with the concept of ‘fake news’ and ‘deepfakes’; for many years students have been able to plagiarise documents for their essays, but now ChatGPT can even write them from scratch. Generative AI gives anyone the power to create events that never happened and objects that don’t exist with almost undetectable realism. Wearing my political commentator’s hat I try to keep abreast of what the Far Right – currently the source of the most venomous misinformation – is up to. I feel obliged to sample the bizarre conspiracies and pseudo-sciences they conjure up, from anti-vaxxing and ‘black goo’, through graphene oxide, ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, to Bill Gates’s injectable nanobots. Google these at your peril. These propagators of nonsense aren’t just a problem for the USA either. For example Vanessa Barbara has described in a recent New York Review of Books the way the Far Right used YouTube videos during the Brazilian election that only narrowly unseated Bolsonaro (whose antivax policies killed 700,000, almost as many as Trump):“People who trust vaccines are called aceitacionistas (a neologism to describe people who accept things without questioning). Those of us who received Covid shots are ‘hybrids’ who have been ‘zombified.’ […] Despite exhaustive efforts from fact-checking agencies and the WHO, these groups continue spreading old falsehoods claiming that Covid vaccines contain microchips, nanoparticles, graphene oxide, quantum dots, and parasites activated by electromagnetic impulses. According to them, vaccines can carry HIV (the virus that causes AIDS), make coins stick to our arms, and give us the ability to connect to Wi-Fi networks or pair with Bluetooth devices.” You couldn’t make it up, but Midjourney could, and illustrate it with stunning visuals. 

The original Surrealist movement of the 1920s was an artistic response to the horrors of WWI, which employed unnerving and illogical imagery – both literary and visual – to satirise and oppose the conventional ideas that had lead to the war. It was a radical, even revolutionary movement, leaning toward anarchism and communism, which depicted the darkest aspects of human nature using an equally dark humour. A century later that dark humour thoroughly permeates our current popular culture, entertainment industry and even advertising. Generative AI could make such post-traumatic nihilism available as a visual weapon for everybody who desperately wishes to defy reality, which means quite a lot of people since reality is looking increasingly grim.

Am I suggesting AI imaging be restricted, licensed, even banned? Not at all, it can’t be done. Just as with handguns in the USA, this genie is well out of its bottle. (Memo to self: “genie with jewelled turban on copper lamp, octane render, photorealistic, style of brueghel”) 

[Sample Dick Pountain’s creepy concoctions at http://www.dickpountain.co.uk/home/pictures ]  

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