• Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      9 months ago

      Even without AI there’s an awful lot of random stock photos. Years ago I remember I searched for and found a stock image of a woman tied to the train tracks of one of those kids mini train things, also there was like a few to pick from. I swear it was in some way relevant to the presentation that was giving but they can’t remember details.

      AI isn’t needed.

  • viking@infosec.pub
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    9 months ago

    Anything taken before 2023, yes. I had a former colleague who’s boyfriend was a photographer, and he took a shitload of pictures of her in various random business suites and situations, close-ups of her holding pens, mugs, papers, glasses, etc. etc. and published them on some stock portals. They don’t pay a whole lot of royalties for multiple use images, but every now and then someone buys an exclusive license, meaning the picture is afterwards removed from the stock archive, and that pays several hundred bucks.

    So it’s really a numbers game, the more photos you dump on the platform, the better.

    Anything published since last year has at least a chance to be AI generated. Should be tagged as such, but well. Should.

    • Naich@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      I was chatting with a stock photographer a while back. Apparently the most important thing is the tags that you give the photos. The best ones are abstract because you aren’t competing with “hand” and “pen”. If you can make your photo of a hand holding a pen fit “wistful” or “trenchant” then you have a better chance of it being seen. Making thousands of weird photos like a hammer/screwdriver/wand being held over a watermelon/plastic duck/brick by a clown/policeman/nurse and giving them abstract tags is the way to go.

  • redcalcium@lemmy.institute
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    9 months ago

    If the stock photos are sold in a stock photo sites that don’t allow computer-generated or edited photos, then yes, they’re most likely real.

  • Krudler@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    Bill Lastname, Cardholder

    … Is also a real person, credit card companies specifically pay people to license their name for stock card shots, so that no one can sue them.

  • Sirico@feddit.uk
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    9 months ago

    Being a stock photo model is prob one of the first casualties of AI-Generative images