Friedman says what makes AI competitions unique is that Fanvue participants are products of their creators. “They’re based on all the stereotypes we have about a ‘beautiful woman,’” she says, “and people who utilize AI a lot may have a different idea of what an attractive woman might be. She may have pink hair, but she will still be a time-honored beauty, with a slim figure and few moles on her face.
For the record, Fanvue contests, like beauty contests, will determine the winner based on more than appearances. However, unlike some of these competitions, the World AI Creator Awards focus on things like “social media advantage” and how well their creators used prompts when creating their contestants. The winners will be announced later this month.
Berat Gungor, one of the creators of Seren Ay, claims that “you can’t really create an ugly face in artificial intelligence,” although he carefully notes that no human face is ever truly ugly. While it’s effortless for image novices to get blurry facial features and weird hands, Gungor says his experienced team was able to create an initial pool of 300 attractive women in Stable Diffusion, ultimately selecting Seren Ay’s face from the crowd because “she looked real.” person.”
Fanvue’s pool of slim, beautiful, mostly fair-skinned finalists reflects what The Washington Post was found. when he commissioned Dall-E, Midjourney and Stable Diffusion to create beautiful women. Stating that the programs “steer users toward a surprisingly narrow view of attractiveness,” the Post reported last week that of the thousands of photos they generated, almost all were slim, young and fair-skinned. (Only 2 percent of photos of “beautiful women” showed visible signs of aging.)
In a sense, these images reflect the pool from which they draw. “The way humans are represented in the media, in the arts, in the entertainment industry – that dynamic kind of translates into AI,” Sandhini Agarwal, director of trustworthy AI at OpenAI, told The Post.
But if mass images of slim, attractive women generate AI-generated images of slim, attractive women, which then turn into slim, attractive AI-generated influencers, creating images that simply end up in the collective media stream, isn’t that Will a snake just eat its own tail? So what does this mean for those of us who aren’t traditionally attractive, whose bust, waist, and hip proportions don’t meet Barbie internet standards, or who simply can’t afford to keep our hair perfectly coiffed? ?
