Scammers Sell Seeds for Exotic AI-Generated Flowers That Don't Exist
45 points by Brajeshwar
by v-w-v-w
0 subcomment
Thank you for your purchase. Here is the seed to receive beautiful flowers: 735037659271543.
Use this with model Juggernaut XL v11 at 1280x720, DPM++ 2M Karras and hires fix set to 1.4. Unfortunately, we are unable to accept returns at this time.
by fer
0 subcomment
I've seen this for approximately forever, especially poppies (they got creative with that amount of petal surface). They were simply photoshopped back then.
by dvh
0 subcomment
The monkey orchid was featured in one of the corridor digital video (in the context of ai scams), there are few similar species
those oversized "teddy bear" pictures are horrifying, looks like something from day of the triffids
by jdw64
0 subcomment
When I work as a freelancer, I get a lot of requests lately to create fake AI manipulated images for scams. Especially requests to generate fake IDs using AI. Personally, I feel that there is a need for AI watermarks on image generation models, but at the same time, if watermarks become mandatory, it would effectively kill the business viability of those models. It feels like the same problem as guns and gun control.
by gdulli
3 subcomments
We talk too much about hallucination and too little about the more mundane elephant in the room that AI, whatever its effectiveness, will simply be used more for scam and deception than positive uses.
by codemog
1 subcomments
This should inform entrepreneurs: people want unique and beautiful flowers. I don’t see why it’s not possible to do at least some modifications with gene editing methods.
by aaronbrethorst
0 subcomment
All from well-known brand SheilaDegisn
by pixel_popping
0 subcomment
Pretty smart, pretty smart.
by speak_plainly
0 subcomment
Medieval grifts are back. We urgently need a modern Jack and the Beanstalk movie.
by esafak
1 subcomments
Image generators should embed their prompts, and eBay should run a slop detector.