Those same images have made it easier for AI systems to produce realistic and explicit imagery of fake children as well as transform social media photos of fully clothed real teens into nudes, much to the alarm of schools and law enforcement around the world.

Until recently, anti-abuse researchers thought the only way that some unchecked AI tools produced abusive imagery of children was by essentially combining what they’ve learned from two separate buckets of online images — adult pornography and benign photos of kids.

But the Stanford Internet Observatory found more than 3,200 images of suspected child sexual abuse in the giant AI database LAION, an index of online images and captions that’s been used to train leading AI image-makers such as Stable Diffusion. The watchdog group based at Stanford University worked with the Canadian Centre for Child Protection and other anti-abuse charities to identify the illegal material and report the original photo links to law enforcement.

  • ForgotAboutDre@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    arrow-down
    3
    ·
    7 months ago

    This is happening in part because the creators of these AI systems don’t verify their training data.

    It’s inexcusable to include this content and then claim bad actors.

    Doing the same thing with other methods is also not allowed in many countries. Along with the distribution of such material. Just because an AI does it does not justify it.

    Any person or business creating or using such material shouldn’t be allowed unsupervised access to distribution methods. This is the case for older methods. AI shouldn’t be a Scape goat. It just provides plausible deniability.

    Plausible deniability shouldn’t be an excuse. Especially in cases where businesses are doing this. They should be responsible for the content they feed into training AI. It’s completely inexcusable. Only dumb tech bros that don’t understand tech and pedos could seriously think this should be allowed.

    • AnonTwo@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      7 months ago

      What exactly are you basing the dumb tech bros thing on? Is there even a single training set that has some sort of verification yet? If they did we wouldn’t have all the DMCA issues that AI is also going through would we? It seems like it’s generally argued that’s not actually easy to do at the moment.

      Like you’re arguing a lot of absolutes here that don’t seem to be backed up by anything???