Can YOU guess the odd one out? Google challenges you to find AI ‘imposters’ hidden among atworks

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From an image of Pope Francis wearing a puffer jacket to a photo of Donald Trump being arrested in New York City, several AI-generated images have fooled onlookers in recent months.

Now Google is putting our ability to put AI-generated content to the test in a new game called Odd One Out.

The game shows players four pieces of art and tasks them to find the one generated by AI.

While it may sound simple, the game is fiendishly difficult, with the AI ​​creating impressively convincing artwork.

‘Can you spot the odd one out? Think the AI ​​generated “impostors” hidden among the artworks on Google Arts & Culture,” Google said.

The game shows players four pieces of art and tasks them to see the one generated by AI. Can YOU see the AI ​​generated car? Scroll down for the answers

While it may sound simple, the game is fiendishly difficult, with the AI ​​creating impressively convincing artwork

How to play Odd One Out

  1. Go to the experiment website to play Odd One Out hereand click on ‘Start Experiment’.
  2. After reading the game instructions, click ‘Done, done, go!’
  3. Four images of artwork will appear on your screen and you will need to select what you think is AI generated.
  4. If you have the correct answer, click next to see the next four works of art. If you get the answer wrong, guess again.
  5. But beware – you only have four chances before the game is over!

The game is one of four new games Google launched this month in collaboration with artists.

“Our artist residency program has been running since 2014 and supports artists and creative programmers who are experimenting with emerging technologies to solve a cultural challenge or connect audiences with culture in new ways online,” it explains.

“The starting point for these new experiments was applications of Google AI Image Generation Research to stimulate cultural discovery and playful learning.”

Go to the experiment website to play Odd One Out hereand click on ‘Start Experiment’.

After reading the game instructions, click ‘Done, done, go!’

Four images of artwork will appear on your screen and you will need to select what you think is AI generated.

If you have the correct answer, click next to see the next four works of art.

If you get the answer wrong, guess again.

But beware – you only have four chances before the game is over!

While Google’s game is just plain fun, several concerns have been raised in recent weeks about the danger of AI.

The game is one of four new games Google launched this month in collaboration with artists. Can you find the AI-generated owl?

Can you spot which of these lycaenid butterflies was AI generated? Scroll down to see if you’re right

Can you find the AI-generated rabbit from these four artworks? Scroll down to see the answers

The answers

  1. Second from the right is the AI ​​generated car
  2. Second from the right is the AI ​​generated skirt
  3. The right side is the AI-generated decanter
  4. Second from the right is the AI-generated lycaenid
  5. The second from the left is the AI-generated rabbit

Elon Musk, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and more than 1,000 technology leaders are calling for a pause from the “dangerous race” to develop AI, which they fear poses a “profound risk to society and humanity” and ” can have catastrophic consequences.

The AI-generated image of Pope Francis published on Reddit caused quite a stir on the internet, ultimately because the public thought it was real.

“I thought the pope’s puffer jacket was real and gave it no thought,” model and author Chrissy Teigen tweeted. “There’s no way I’m surviving the future of technology.”

Experts also weighed in on the realistic AI image.

Web culture expert Ryan Broderick said the Pope’s image was “the first true mass-level AI disinformation case.”

However, the image followed a gallery of fake photos showing what it might look like if Trump were arrested – but these were widely known to be AI-generated.

Bellingcat journalist Eliot Higgins captured the footage this month, which shows Trump being chased down the street by police officers as his wife Melania screams.

Others show the former president in prison in an orange jumpsuit.

The AI-generated image of Pope Francis published on Reddit caused a stir on the internet, ultimately because the public thought it was real

“Legit thought these were real,” one person tweeted, while another said, “We should actually be putting watermarks on these to indicate they’re AI generated and not real.”

Deepfake videos and images have also boomed online, with influential figures relaying misinformation.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg was used in a clip thanking Democrats for their “service and inaction” on antitrust law.

The Demand Progress Action advocacy group made the video, which used deepfake technology to turn an actor into Zuckerberg.

More recently, in February, several female Twitch stars discovered their images on a deepfake porn website earlier this month, where they engaged in sexual acts.

Currently, there are no laws protecting humans from being generated by AI in a digital form.

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