Experts say those AI portraits everyone is doing could pose a data threat
Digital portraits made with artificial intelligence are all over the internet and look vibrant, imaginative and enticing ... but they also may be used to compile user data, experts say.
Mari Galloway, an AI and cybersecurity specialist, tells TODAY.com that users should still be concerned, despite claims in Lensa’s privacy policy. on Dec. 6 that the user's photos are"erased permanently from our servers" as soon as the avatars are generated — a statement which publicly echoes the claims made in the company's aforementioned privacy policy.
"We have to be very, very careful about what we put on our phone and what we share with those applications," she shares.AI images can only be created using photographs of real people, Schmidhuber explains. The more images databases have, the smarter the artificial intelligence becomes. It can help companies"use the data for generating additional faces for training networks to be even better," he said.
Schmidhuber and Galloway both say AI networks will likely have racial bias. The people who create and develop the technology, consciously or not, also choose which images and data points it recognizes.
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