A U.K. woman was photographed standing in a mirror where her reflections didn’t match, but not because of a glitch in the Matrix. Instead, it’s a simple iPhone computational photography mistake.

  • e0qdk
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    1997 months ago

    This story may be amusing, but it’s actually a serious issue if Apple is doing this and people are not aware of it because cellphone imagery is used in things like court cases. Relative positions of people in a scene really fucking matter in those kinds of situations. Someone’s photo of a crime could be dismissed or discredited using this exact news story as an example – or worse, someone could be wrongly convicted because the composite produced a misleading representation of the scene.

      • Ook the Librarian
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        207 months ago

        This was important in the Kyle Rittenhouse case. The zoom resolution was interpolated by software. It wasn’t AI per se, but the fact that a jury couldn’t be relied upon to understand a black box algorithm and its possible artifacts, the zoomed video was disallowed.

        (this in no way implies that I agree with the court.)

        • wagoner
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          37 months ago

          I watched that whole court exchange live, and it helped the defendant’s case that the judge was computer illiterate.

          • Ook the Librarian
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            27 months ago

            As it usually does. But the court’s ineptitude should favor the defense. It shouldn’t be an arrow in a prosecutor’s quiver, at least.

        • Rob T Firefly
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          37 months ago

          The zoom resolution was interpolated by software. It wasn’t AI per se

          Except it was. All the “AI” junk being hyped and peddled all over the place as a completely new and modern innovation is really just the same old interpolation by software, albeit software which is fueled by bigger databases and with more computing power thrown at it.

          It’s all just flashier autocorrect.

          • Ook the Librarian
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            17 months ago

            As far as I know, nothing about AI entered into arguments. No precedents regarding AI could have been set here. Therefore, this case wasn’t about AI per se.

            I did bring it up as relevant because, as you say, AI is just an over-hyped black box. But that’s my opinion, with no case law to cite (ianal). So to say that a court would or should feel that AI and fancy photoediting is the same thing is misleading. I know that wasn’t your point, but it was part of mine.

      • Decoy321
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        137 months ago

        We might be exaggerating the issue here. Fallibility has always been an issue with court evidence. Analog photos can be doctored too.

        • @curiousaur@reddthat.com
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          37 months ago

          Sure, but smartphones now automatically doctor every photo you take. Someone who took the photo could not even know it was doctored and think it represents truth.

          • Decoy321
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            17 months ago

            Fair point, but I still think we’re exaggerating the amount of doctoring that’s being done by the phones. There’s always been some level of discrepancy between real life subjects and the images taken of them.

            It’s just a tool creating media from sensor data. Those sensors aren’t the same as our eyes, and their processors don’t hold a candle to our own brains.

            In the interest of not rambling, let’s look back at early black and white cameras. When people looked at those photos, did they assume the world was black and white? Or did they acknowledge this as a characteristic of the camera?

      • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        87 months ago

        With all the image manipulation and generation tools available to even amateurs, I’m not sure how any photography is admissible as evidence these days.

        At some point there’s going to have to be a whole bunch of digital signing (and timestamp signatures) going on inside the camera for things to be even considered.

    • @Jarix@lemmy.world
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      107 months ago

      This isn’t an issue at all it’s a bullshit headline. And it worked.

      This is the result of shooting in panorama mode.

      In other news, the sky is blue

  • @slaacaa@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Uhm, ok?

    The way the girl’s post is written, it’s like she found out Apple made camera lenses from orphans’ retinas (“almost made me vomit on the street”). I assumed it was well known that iPhone takes many photos and stitches the pic together (hence the usually great quality). Now the software made a mistake, resulting in a definitely cool/interesting pic, but that’s it.

    Also, maybe stop flailing your arms around when you want your pic taken in your wedding dress.

    • @LifeInOregon@lemmy.world
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      407 months ago

      Generally the final photo is an accurate representation of a moment. Everything in this photo happened. It’s not really generating anything that wasn’t there. You can sometimes get similar results by exploiting the rolling shutter effect.

      https://camerareviews.com/rolling-shutter/

      It’s not like they’re superimposing an image of the moon over a night sky photo to fake astrophotography or something.

    • @hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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      197 months ago

      A photo is a fake reality. It’s a capture of the world from the perspective of a camera that no person has ever seen.

      Sure we can approximate with viewfinders and colour match as much as possible but it’s not reality. Take a photo of a light bulb, versus look at a light bulb, as one obvious example.

      This is just one other way to get less consistency in the time of different parts of the photos, but overall better capture what we want to see in a photo.

        • @hitmyspot@aussie.zone
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          57 months ago

          Yes, but that’s the reality from the perspective of the camera, which will be slightly different from a perspective of the person operating it.

          If the camera is out of focus, is that more or less accurate than a phone camera choosing the least out of focus frame, even if half a second after you clicked?

          There is no objective reality in pictures or photos or art, only what we perceive. We now value real life activity shots. When cameras needed long exposure, it was still life portrait by necessity. Both show different versions of reality.

          Again, you’re saying that the camera has flaws, ergo it’s imperfect, but in a known way. It’s the same for phone photos. They are imperfect but in a known way that leads to more frequent desirable pics.

      • @dan1101@lemm.ee
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        17 months ago

        However I think most cameras and most people traditionally have wanted the most accurate photos possible. If the camera is outputting fiction that can be a big problem.

        • @nyan@lemmy.cafe
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          37 months ago

          Oh, dear. No, in most cases people seem to want the prettiest photos possible. Otherwise digital filters wouldn’t be so popular.

    • Chozo
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      7 months ago

      To their credit, it’s not “fake”. This isn’t from generative AI, this is from AI picking from multiple different exposures of the same shot and stitching various parts of them together to create the “best” version of the photo.

      Everything seen in the photo was still 100% captured in-lens. Just… not at the exact same time.

    • @elint@programming.dev
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      -17 months ago

      You think that’s absurd? Have you never gotten married? Wedding photos are extremely important and while “she almost vomited” may be hyperbole, I can definitely understand being very pissed off if that was the only version of the photo. Our wedding photographer whitened our teeth in our photos and we requested that they undo that so we look like ourselves. The sentiment was nice, but we didn’t want that. I would have been pretty unhappy if they hadn’t held onto the originals and were unable to revert our teeth back to their normal shades. Photos of our bridal showers and dress hunting were nearly as important as the wedding photos themselves. I can understand being upset with this undesired result.

  • @NaoPb@eviltoast.org
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    257 months ago

    Ah yes, I remember noticing it would make like a short video instead of one picture, back when I had an iPhone. I turned that function off because I didn’t see the benefits.

    • @KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      127 months ago

      That’s not what this is. I also turned that off, it’s called “Live Photo” or something like that. Honestly I find it to be a dumb feature.

      What this is, is the iPhone taking a large number of images and stitching them together for better results.

      • @jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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        17 months ago

        It’s not dumb. It let’s you select the best moment within a 1-2 second margin after or before you took the picture.

        • @KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          107 months ago

          No, these are literally just short videos. You interact with them like photos, you see them as photos, half the time people sending them think they are photos, but when you tap all the way into them they are a short video. They are absolutely not presented as a “choose your exact frame” pre-photo things, they are presented as photos.

          • Blue and Orange
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            27 months ago

            Yeah “Live photo” really is just an Apple marketing term. You interact with them in a certain way on iOS and they are presented in a certain way, but anywhere else they’re just very short videos.

          • @locuester@lemmy.zip
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            -27 months ago

            Wrong. Pretty crazy, it does let you change which frame is the photo. Click edit, then hit the Live Photo icon next to “cancel”

            • @KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              17 months ago

              That isnt the point of a Live Photo, that’s just a “feature.” Similar to how YouTube lets you choose a thumbnail for a video, but that’s not really the point of YouTube.

              • @locuester@lemmy.zip
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                37 months ago

                Per Apple support:

                With Live Photos, your iPhone records what happens 1.5 seconds before and after you take a picture. Then you can pick a different key photo, add a fun effect, edit your Live Photo, and share with your family and friends.

                So it’s actually the first example of what Live Photo is for.

                If you didn’t even know about this, don’t feel bad. I’m an Apple fanboy and my daughter just showed me that it allowed you to do this “different key photo” last month. Kids are good for that.

                • @KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  17 months ago

                  I’m aware that’s it’s possible, but that isn’t part of the onboarding or anything. What I mean is, it’s an addon. It was never part of the original iteration, which was just “look moving Harry Potter photos.”

                  It’s a gimmick that doesn’t even work cross device, because it’s literally just a short video.

  • @aeronmelon@lemm.ee
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    137 months ago

    It’s a really cool discovery, but I don’t know how Apple is suppose to program against it.

    What surprises me is how much of a time range each photo has to work with. Enough time for Tessa to put down one arm and then the other. It’s basically recording a mini-video and selecting frames from it. I wonder if turning off things like Live Photo (which retroactively starts the video a second or two before you actually press record) would force the Camera app to select from a briefer range of time.

    Maybe combining facial recognition with post processing to tell the software that if it thinks it’s looking at multiple copies of the same person, it needs to time-sync the sections of frames chosen for the final photo. It wouldn’t be foolproof, but it would be better than nothing.

    • @xantoxis@lemmy.world
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      357 months ago

      Program against it? It’s a camera. Put what’s on the light sensor into the file, you’re done. They programmed to make this happen, by pretending that multiple images are the same image.

      • Nine
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        07 months ago

        That’s over simplified. There’s only so much you can get on a sensor at the sizes in mobile devices. To compensate there’s A LOT of processing that goes on. Even higher end DSLR cameras are doing post processing.

        Even shooting RAW like you’re suggesting involves some amount of post processing for things like lens corrections.

        It’s all that post processing that allows us to have things like HDR images for example. It also allows us to compensate for various lighting and motion changes.

        Mobile phone cameras are more about the software than the hardware these days

        • @cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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          127 months ago

          With a DSLR, the person editing the pictures has full control over what post processing is done to the RAW files.

          • Nine
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            17 months ago

            Correct, I was referring to RAW shot on mobile not a proper DLSR. I guess I should have been more clear about that. Sorry!

            • @uzay
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              27 months ago

              You might be confounding a RAW photo file and the way it is displayed. A RAW file isn’t even actually an image file, it’s a container containing the sensor pixel information, metadata, and a pre-generated JPG thumbnail. To actually display an image, the viewer application either has to interpret the sensor data into an image (possible with changes according to its liking) or just display the contained JPG. On mobile phones I think it’s most likely that the JPG is generated with pre-applied post-processing and displayed that way. That doesn’t mean the RAW file has any post-processing applied to it though.

        • @randombullet@feddit.de
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          17 months ago

          Raw files from cameras have meta data that tells raw converters the info of which color profile and lenses it’s taken with, but any camera worth using professionally doesn’t have any native corrections on raw files. However, in special cases as with lenses with high distortion, the raw files have a distortion profile on by default.

          • Nine
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            -17 months ago

            Correct, I was referring to RAW shot on mobile devices not a proper DSLR. That was my observations based off of using the iPhone raw and android raw formats.

            This isn’t my area of expertise so if I’m wrong about that aspect too let me know! 😃

          • Nine
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            27 months ago

            So what was I wrong about? I’m always happy to learn from my mistakes! 😊

            Do you have some whitepapers I can reference too?

              • Nine
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                17 months ago

                Gonna provide more information or is this just a trust me bro situation?

                • @SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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                  27 months ago

                  Not sure what I have to gain from just lying on the Internet about inconsequential things.

                  Also not sure I can disclose too many technical details due to NDAs, but I’ve worked on camera stacks on multiple Android-based devices. Yes, there’s tons of layers of firmware and software throughout the camera stack, but it very importantly does not alter consequential elements of images, and concentrates on image quality, not image contents.

                  While the sensors in smartphones might not be as physically large as those in DSLRs - at least, in general - there’s still significant quality in the raw sensor data that does not inherently require the sort of image stitching that Apple is doing.

              • @schmidtster@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                You think too highly of yourself.

                When you comment spam just about every thread you’ll come across people multiple times.

    • @Petter1@lemm.ee
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      -37 months ago

      Or maybe just don’t move your arm for literally less than a second while the foto(s) is/are taken… Moving your arm(s) down happens in less than a second if one just let them fall by gravity. It’s a funny pic nonetheless.

  • @orion2145@lemmy.world
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    77 months ago

    There’s a note at the end of the article that says it was take using pano. So this is doubly unsurprising. Despite the instagram caption reading it wasn’t.

  • kirklennon
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    7 months ago

    This person is an actress and comedian. This is not an iPhone error; it’s just a manually-edited photo from three separate takes that she pretended came out of the phone as-is. It’s a hoax for laughs/attention.