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AI tools can create new images, but who is the real artist?

Artificial intelligence systems are training themselves on a vast collection of digitized artworks to produce new images that can be conjured in seconds from a smartphone app

Matt O'Brien,Arijeta Lajka
Thursday 19 January 2023 14:07 GMT

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Countless artists have taken inspiration from ā€œThe Starry Nightā€ since Vincent Van Gogh painted the swirling scene in 1889.

Now artificial intelligence systems are doing the same, training themselves on a vast collection of digitized artworks to produce new images you can conjure in seconds from a smartphone app.

The images generated by tools such as DALL-E, Midjourney and Stable Diffusion can be weird and otherworldly but also increasingly realistic and customizable ā€” ask for a ā€œpeacock owl in the style of Van Gogh" and they can churn out something that might look similar to what you imagined.

But while Van Gogh and other long-dead master painters aren't complaining, some living artists and photographers are starting to fight back against the AI software companies creating images derived from their works.

Two new lawsuits ā€”- one this week from the Seattle-based photography giant Getty Images ā€”- take aim at popular image-generating services for allegedly copying and processing millions of copyright-protected images without a license.

Getty said it has begun legal proceedings in the High Court of Justice in London against Stability AI ā€” the maker of Stable Diffusion ā€”- for infringing intellectual property rights to benefit the London-based startup's commercial interests.

Another lawsuit filed Friday in a U.S. federal court in San Francisco describes AI image-generators as ā€œ21st-century collage tools that violate the rights of millions of artists.ā€ The lawsuit, filed by three working artists on behalf of others like them, also names Stability AI as a defendant, along with San Francisco-based image-generator startup Midjourney, and the online gallery DeviantArt.

The lawsuit said AI-generated images ā€œcompete in the marketplace with the original images. Until now, when a purchaser seeks a new image ā€˜in the styleā€™ of a given artist, they must pay to commission or license an original image from that artist.ā€

Companies that provide image-generating services typically charge users a fee. After a free trial of Midjourney through the chatting app Discord, for instance, users must buy a subscription that starts at $10 per month or up to $600 a year for corporate memberships. The startup OpenAI also charges for use of its DALL-E image generator, and StabilityAI offers a paid service called DreamStudio.

Stability AI said in a statement that ā€œAnyone that believes that this isnā€™t fair use does not understand the technology and misunderstands the law.ā€

In a December interview with The Associated Press, before the lawsuits were filed, Midjourney CEO David Holz described his image-making subscription service as ā€œkind of like a search engineā€ pulling in a wide swath of images from across the internet. He compared copyright concerns about the technology with how such laws have adapted to human creativity.

ā€œCan a person look at somebody elseā€™s picture and learn from it and make a similar picture?ā€ Holz said. ā€œObviously, itā€™s allowed for people and if it wasnā€™t, then it would destroy the whole professional art industry, probably the nonprofessional industry too. To the extent that AIs are learning like people, itā€™s sort of the same thing and if the images come out differently then it seems like itā€™s fine.ā€

The copyright disputes mark the beginning of a backlash against a new generation of impressive tools ā€” some of them introduced just last year ā€” that can generate new images, readable text and computer code on command.

They also raise broader concerns about the propensity of AI tools to amplify misinformation or cause other harm. For AI image generators, that includes the creation of nonconsensual sexual imagery.

Some systems produce photorealistic images that can be impossible to trace, making it difficult to tell the difference between whatā€™s real and whatā€™s AI. And while most have some safeguards in place to block offensive or harmful content, experts say it's not enough and fear itā€™s only a matter of time until people utilize these tools to spread disinformation and further erode public trust.

ā€œOnce we lose this capability of telling whatā€™s real and whatā€™s fake, everything will suddenly become fake because you lose confidence of anything and everything,ā€ said Wael Abd-Almageed, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Southern California.

As a test, The Associated Press submitted a text prompt on Stable Diffusion featuring the keywords ā€œUkraine warā€ and ā€œGetty Images.ā€ The tool created photo-like images of soldiers in combat with warped faces and hands, pointing and carrying guns. Some of the images also featured the Getty watermark, but with garbled text.

AI can also get things wrong, like feet and fingers or details on ears that can sometimes give away that theyā€™re not real, but thereā€™s no set pattern to look out for. And those visual clues can also be edited. On Midjourney, for instance, users often post on the Discord chat asking for advice on how to fix distorted faces and hands.

With some generated images traveling on social networks and potentially going viral, they can be challenging to debunk since they canā€™t be traced back to a specific tool or data source, according to Chirag Shah, a professor at the Information School at the University of Washington, who uses these tools for research.

ā€œYou could make some guesses if you have enough experience working with these tools,ā€ Shah said. ā€œBut beyond that, there is no easy or scientific way to really do this."

But for all the backlash, there are many people who embrace the new AI tools and the creativity they unleash. Searches on Midjourney, for instance, show curious users are using the tool as a hobby to create intricate landscapes, portraits and art.

There's plenty of room for fear, but ā€œwhat can else can we do with them?ā€ asked the artist Refik Anadol this week at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where he displayed an exhibit of his AI-generated work.

At the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Anadol designed ā€œUnsupervised," which draws from artworks in the museumā€™s prestigious collection ā€” including ā€œThe Starry Nightā€ ā€” and feeds them into a massive digital installation generating animations of mesmerizing colors and shapes in the museum lobby.

The installation is ā€œconstantly changing, evolving and dreaming 138,000 old artworks at MoMAā€™s Archive,ā€ Anadol said. ā€œFrom Van Gogh to Picasso to Kandinsky, incredible, inspiring artists who defined and pioneered different techniques exist in this artwork, in this AI dream world.ā€

For painters like Erin Hanson, whose impressionist landscapes are so popular and easy to find online that she has seen their influence in AI-produced visuals, she is not worried about her own prolific output, which makes $3 million a year.

She does, however, worry about the art community as a whole.

ā€œThe original artist needs to be acknowledged in some way or compensated,ā€ Hanson said. ā€œThat's what copyright laws are all about. And if artists arenā€™t acknowledged, then itā€™s going to make it hard for artists to make a living in the future.ā€

ā€”ā€”

O'Brien reported from Providence, Rhode Island.

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