Deepfakes Can Be Detected by Borrowing a Method From Astronomy
AI images and deepfakes can be detected by borrowing a technique from astronomy.
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petapixel.com »Method - Последние новости [ Фото в новостях ] | |
AI images and deepfakes can be detected by borrowing a technique from astronomy.
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petapixel.com »The machine-learning world just got stupider, and that's a good thing.
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petapixel.com »A new technology developed by Panasonic is capable of quickly correcting distortion and tilt from only one image. Using the new method, images shot at an angle or those that are distorted by a wide-angle lens can be instantly corrected. [Read More] petapixel.com »
Most portrait photographers are familiar with the Brenizer Method for creating massive "bokehramas," but photographer Steven Schultz takes things a step further by using an entire roll of 120 film to create a single portrait. [Read More] petapixel.com »
You've probably heard of the Brenizer Method a lot in the past few months. And in truth, it's a super fun method that can give you results that you couldn't have made otherwise. At least, you could've have done these without a medium format camera, large format camera, or wider super-fast aperture lens. thephoblographer.com »
Photographer Steven Shultz has been experimenting with the Brenizer Method on digital cameras for years, but as he has shot more film throughout 2021, decided to see if there was a way to mix that method with his Mamiya 645AFD. [Read More] petapixel.com »
Researchers at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology have developed a 'faster, cheaper method to produce customized optical components' for applications including 'corrective lenses, augmented and virtual reality, autonomous vehicles, medical imaging and astronomy. dpreview.com »
My name is David Osborn. I always I wanted to do ‘something’ artistic after school, so I spent my first year at art college studying fine art, however, combined with an inability to draw, fine art as a career seemed a bit optimistic and risky. thephoblographer.com »
Researchers at the University of Washington have developed a new deep learning method that essentially creates high-quality cinemagraphs automatically. The team says the method can animate any flowing material, including water, smoke, fire, and clouds. petapixel.com »
I present a series of photos with snails, made using the bokeh method.
The post I Used The Bokeh Method To Capture Snails (35 Pics) first appeared on Bored Panda.
boredpanda.com »Researchers at Western University in Canada have developed a method for restoring damaged daguerreotypes, including plates so degraded that no portion of the original image remains discernible to the eye. dpreview.com »
Cameras these days have a gillion autofocus points, so why would you choose to focus and recompose a scene instead? If you're new to photography, you've probably never thought about or knew about the focus and recompose method at all. thephoblographer.com »
Adobe Senior Creative Director Russell Brown recently posted this neat demo showing a technique for matching colors in Photoshop without touching a hue or saturation slider. His method uses adjustments in grayscale to individual color channels, comparing a swatch of the color he's attempting to change directly to the color he's trying to match. See how he does it in the video above. dpreview.com »
Popular app Prisma applies painting styles to photographs using neural networks, turning a snapshot into an artwork in the style of 'The Scream,' for example. But what if you could transfer photorealistic effects from one photo to another? Researchers at Cornell and Adobe have successfully demonstrated a method that will translate a variety of styles from a reference photo to another image, including things like lighting, time of day and weather. dpreview.com »
Focus stacking on smartphone cameras is not an entirely new thing. It was used on some Nokia Lumia phones, including the Lumia 1520 in 2014, to create a shallow depth-of-field effect and allow for refocusing an image after capture, similar to what the Lytro light field cameras can do. dpreview.com »