this post was submitted on 23 Aug 2024
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[–] FinishingDutch@lemmy.world 62 points 3 weeks ago (18 children)

I work at a newspaper as both a writer and photographer. I deal with images all day.

Photo manipulation has been around as long as the medium itself. And throughout the decades, people have worried about the veracity of images. When PhotoShop became popular, some decried it as the end of truthful photography. And now here’s AI, making things up entirely.

So, as a professional, am I worried? Not really. Because at the end of the day, it all comes down to ‘trust and verify when possible’. We generally receive our images from people who are wholly reliable. They have no reason to deceive us and know that burning that bridge will hurt their organisation and career. It’s not worth it.

If someone was to send us an image that’s ‘too interesting’, we’d obviously try to verify it through other sources. If a bunch of people photographed that same incident from different angles, clearly it’s real. If we can’t verify it, well, we either trust the source and run it, or we don’t.

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 5 points 3 weeks ago

oddly enough, there are models trained to generate different angles of a given scene!

you're right about the importance of trust. leveraging and scaling interpersonal trust is the key to consensus.

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