Getty’s Plunge Into AI Photos | Da Testo a Immagine ai | Midjourney bot | Intelligenza Artificiale Immagini | Turtles AI

Getty’s Plunge Into AI Photos
DukeRem26 settembre 2023
  #Getty #Images partners with #Nvidia, launching new #GenerativeAI #tool for customers to create original #photos. Tool exclusively trained on Getty's licensed image library. Provides legal protections for commercial use. Questions remain about photographer compensation. Getty Images, a leading provider of stock photos, editorial images, video and music, has announced a partnership with technology company Nvidia to build an AI-powered image generator. Named Generative AI by Getty Images, the new tool allows customers to create original images by providing text prompts. It is trained exclusively on Getty's library of hundreds of millions of photographs, giving it a vast visual database. The move positions Getty in the expanding field of generative AI alongside competitors like Adobe, which recently added an AI engine to Photoshop. It also represents an evolution in Getty's stance after suing an AI startup earlier this year over copyright issues. Getty CEO Craig Peters said the tool is "commercially clean" because of their rights to the images. Nvidia provides the AI model architecture through its Picasso platform. Getty has unlimited access to GPUs for training. The companies call themselves "partners" in developing the technology. There are still open questions around compensating original photographers whose work trains the AI models. Highlights: - Getty launching Generative AI image creation tool - Partnership with Nvidia using licensed image library - Provides protections for commercial use - Photographer compensation remains unclear Getty is the latest player entering the generative AI space. While they promise protections, there are still unsettled issues around properly compensating the many creators whose work enables these AI models. We'd love to hear your thoughts on Getty's approach and the broader challenges surrounding AI-generated content. How can we foster creativity while also ensuring creators are fairly paid? Let us know your ideas below!