AI-generated portraits often suffer from plastic-looking skin, glassy eyes, and unnatural hair due to how generative models average training data rather than capturing real human texture. HitPaw FotorPea V5.5.0 introduces an AI Realism Model designed to fix these issues in one click by rebuilding skin texture at the pore level, correcting eye highlights, and reconstructing individual hair strands. The post walks through a practical workflow: generate with any AI tool, import into FotorPea, apply the Realism Model, optionally scale with the Nano Banana model, and export. Batch processing, multi-person restoration for group shots, and a Photoshop plugin are also covered.
Nguồn: https://medium.com/ai-analytics-diaries/your-ai-photos-look-fake-heres-how-to-fix-plastic-looking-skin-746202ceb7de. 8sync News chỉ tóm tắt và dẫn link; bản quyền nội dung thuộc tác giả và nguồn gốc.
Meta đã gỡ bỏ tính năng AI Muse Image mới ra mắt do gây tranh cãi, cho phép người dùng chỉnh sửa ảnh từ tài khoản Instagram công khai bằng cách @-mention. Tính năng này không thông báo cho chủ tài khoản khi ảnh bị sử dụng, khiến người dùng và các cơ quan tài năng như CAA phản đối. Vụ việc cho thấy lo ngại về việc lạm dụng công cụ AI để tạo hình ảnh không được sự đồng thuận trên mạng xã hội.
Lập trình viên nên đọc bài này để hiểu về những thách thức về quyền riêng tư và bảo mật dữ liệu khi phát triển công nghệ AI, đặc biệt là khi xử lý dữ liệu người dùng từ các nền tảng xã hội.
Meta pulled its Muse Image AI feature from Instagram and the Meta AI app just three days after launch after significant backlash over privacy concerns. The tool, the first from Meta Superintelligence Labs, allowed users to generate AI images referencing any public Instagram account by default — with no opt-in required. SAG-AFTRA, talent agency CAA, and actors including Hannah Einbinder publicly criticized the feature, arguing that using someone's image and likeness without explicit consent is unacceptable. Meta initially defended the tool but reversed course within 24 hours of Mark Zuckerberg's public pushback, acknowledging it 'missed the mark' on privacy. The episode reflects a recurring pattern of Meta launching AI features with opt-out defaults and retreating under pressure.
Meta has launched Muse Image, an AI image generator developed by Meta Superintelligence Labs. Available for free via the Meta AI app, Instagram Stories, and WhatsApp, Muse supports text-to-image generation, prompt-based editing, custom ad creation, and interior decoration visualization integrated with Facebook Marketplace. It includes preset prompts to help users get started. Free usage has limits beyond which Meta's subscription plans apply. Meta also announced Muse Video is in development, and separately launched new AI-powered effects for Instagram Stories powered by Muse.
Meta has launched Muse Image, its first AI image generation model developed under the Superintelligence Labs division led by Alexandr Wang. The model is rolling out inside Meta AI, Instagram, and WhatsApp, allowing users to generate images from text prompts, edit existing photos, and create images featuring friends based on their public Instagram posts. An opt-out option is available in settings, and all generated images include an invisible watermark. Advertisers will gain access soon for marketing material creation. This is the second major product from Wang's lab, following the Muse Spark LLM released in April. Meta also plans to monetize its AI infrastructure by selling model access and compute to outside developers via a cloud offering.
Figma is integrating its Weave AI creative platform more deeply into the Figma design canvas. Three key updates are announced: 20+ AI image tools (style transfers, product shoots, material extraction) are now accessible directly from Figma Design's left panel as pre-built Weave workflows; Weave workflows can now be published and discovered on the Figma Community, letting designers share reusable creative pipelines; and a forthcoming Figma node in Weave will allow designers to paste Figma frames directly into Weave workflows, with real-time sync between design edits and the creative pipeline. Weave tools are in open beta and free during the beta period, with Figma AI credits required once generally available.
Getty Images has voted unanimously to terminate its $3.7bn merger with Shutterstock after the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) demanded Shutterstock sell its global editorial business — including celebrity photo agencies Backgrid and Splash — as a condition of approval. The US Department of Justice had already cleared the deal unconditionally. Shutterstock shares dropped roughly 30% in after-hours trading following the announcement. The collapse leaves both stock-photo giants to independently navigate the existential threat posed by AI image generators, despite each having separately signed licensing deals with OpenAI. The outcome highlights the CMA's growing power to block or reshape global tech and media deals, with implications for other pending mergers like Paramount's takeover of Warner Bros Discovery.
A walkthrough of creating a custom Codex Pet using two tabby cats as the subject. Covers generating a base image with AI prompts, producing animation frames for 9 states (idle, running, waving, jumping, etc.), organizing frame PNGs into a folder structure, assembling them into a 1536x1872 spritesheet using a Python Pillow script, generating the required pet.json metadata file, and uploading both files to codex-pets.net.
Google has released Nano Banana 2 Lite, the fastest and cheapest model in its Nano Banana image generation family. It produces images in four seconds at under four cents per thousand images, targeting developers who need high-velocity, low-cost image generation. Available immediately in Google AI Studio, the Gemini API, and the Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform, it replaces the original Nano Banana (now labeled legacy). Alongside this, Google is broadly releasing Gemini Omni Flash, its video-generation model, to developers via the Gemini API at ten cents per second of output, capped at ten seconds per clip. Google positions the two models as a pipeline: generate images quickly with Nano Banana 2 Lite, then animate them with Omni Flash. The releases come amid broader debate over AI-generated content quality and Google's $75M partnership with A24 for AI filmmaking tools.