Robot Technology News
ROBO SPACE
Pioneering AI artist says the technology is ultimately 'limiting'
Pioneering AI artist says the technology is ultimately 'limiting'
By Charlotte HOUANG
Hamburg (AFP) Jan 13, 2024

An artist who shook up the cultural world with a haunting female portrait created by artificial intelligence has decided she's had enough of the new technology for now.

Working with AI to create art is ultimately "very frustrating and very limiting," Swedish-based artist and writer Supercomposite told AFP.

For the moment, she has stopped working with AI and is writing a screenplay instead, saying her experience with AI art left her "burned out".

"It creates this dopamine path in your brain. It's very addictive to keep pushing that button and getting these results," she said.

Supercomposite created the red-cheeked, hollow-eyed woman called "Loab" in 2022 when she was testing out the new artistic possibilities offered by AI.

Her posts on social media of Loab and about the process to create her went viral, with commentators describing the images as "disturbing" and saying they had "sparked some lengthy ethical conversations around visual aesthetics, art and technology".

Tools like Midjourney, Stable Diffusion and DALL-E have made it possible to generate images from written prompts.

Supercomposite -- whose real name is Steph Maj Swanson and is originally from the United States -- had been looking at so-called "negative prompts", designed to exclude certain elements from an image.

- 'That was the spookiest' -

She typed in the negative prompt "Brando::-1", asking one tool to come up with something as far as possible from the late American actor Marlon Brando.

What appeared at first was a black logo with green lettering that spelt out "DIGITA PNTICS", the 32-year-old told AFP in an interview at the Chaos Communication Congress, which brings the hacker scene together every year in late December in Hamburg.

But when the artist requested the opposite of this again with the query "DIGITA PNTICS" skyline logo::-1", the image of "this really sad, haunting looking woman with long hair and red cheeks" appeared for the first time, she said.

The text "Loab" appeared in truncated letters on one of the images -- giving a name to the creature that looked like it sprang from a horror movie.

Swanson then sought to get AI to modify Loab with another request. And to that new generated image, she made another different request, and another. But a strange trend surfaced.

"Sometimes she would reappear, after vanishing for a few generations of the lineage. That was the spookiest," she said.

More disturbingly, Loab appeared regularly alongside children, "sometimes dismembered", and always in a "macabre" and "bloody" world, she said.

Of the hundreds of images including Loab that were generated, Swanson decided not to show those she deemed the most shocking.

- 'My life changed' -

Loab's existence was first revealed in September 2022 in a series of posts on Twitter, since renamed X.

"It became viral, my life changed," she said, explaining how she became "so obsessed" with Loab.

"I wanted to explore who she was, the different scenarios in which she would appear and her limits, to see how far I could push the model."

The reasons for the character's recurring appearance are unclear. Experts have noted it is impossible to know how generative AI interprets abstract requests.

Swanson has not revealed which tool she used to create Loab, wanting to avoid "shifting the focus away from art and onto the makers of the model" and being accused of "marketing," she said.

But her refusal to name Loab's creator has led to doubts over how she was created, with some internet users suspecting Swanson of re-touching the images to create a so-called "creepypasta" -- a kind of digital horror theme cooked up to haunt social networks.

Swanson denied she'd dreamt up or manually altered Loab, saying she took the claims as a compliment: "It meant people were interacting with it."

But it has been over a year since Swanson has touched Loab, saying the whole affair left her exhausted and burned out. She has stopped creating AI images as she devoted herself to a screenplay.

She summed up her current sentiment about such tools with a quote from South Korean-born video art pioneer Nam June Paik: "I use technology in order to hate it properly".

ch-sr/hmn/gv-jj

X

Related Links
All about the robots on Earth and beyond!

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
ROBO SPACE
Artificial muscle device produces force 34 times its weight
Daejeon, South Korea (SPX) Jan 12, 2024
Soft robots, medical devices, and wearable devices have permeated our daily lives. KAIST researchers have developed a fluid switch using ionic polymer artificial muscles that operates at ultra-low power and produces a force 34 times greater than its weight. Fluid switches control fluid flow, causing the fluid to flow in a specific direction to invoke various movements. KAIST (President Kwang-Hyung Lee) announced on the 4th of January that a research team under Professor IlKwon Oh from the Departme ... read more

ROBO SPACE
Mitsubishi Electric unveils AnyMile for enhanced drone logistics and fleet management

US, British forces shoot down 21 drones and missiles fired from Yemen

Drone targeting coalition troops in Iraq shot down

Explosive drone shot down at Iraqi Kurdistan airbase

ROBO SPACE
The Future of fashion: Waste is the new cotton

Amazon's game streaming platform Twitch cuts 500 jobs

Researchers 3D print components for a portable mass spectrometer

GESTRA space radar successfully enters final test phase

ROBO SPACE
Solid-state qubits: Forget about being clean, embrace mess

Breakthrough in controlling magnetization for spintronics

Towards realizing eco-friendly and high-performance thermoelectric materials

Generating stable qubits at room temperature

ROBO SPACE
UK unveils plans for 'biggest nuclear power expansion in 70 years'

Three-metre tsunami recorded at Japan nuclear plant after quake

EDF to invest 1.3 bn in UK nuclear power stations

UK announces Europe's first high-tech uranium fuel plant

ROBO SPACE
El Salvador court orders ex-president's arrest over 1981 massacre

On anniversary of Lockerbie bombing, Joe Biden says 'pursuit of justice' continues

U.S. announces charges against alleged Hezbollah member in 1994 bombing

Anti-IS coalition forces targeted in Iraq and Syria: US official

ROBO SPACE
EU debates 2040 milestone towards carbon-neutral future

US reduces emissions in 2023 - but not fast enough: report

Private sector funding key to climate transition, World Bank chief says

China, climate in focus at Japan-ASEAN summit

ROBO SPACE
Using idle trucks to power the grid with clean energy

Sudden death of quantum fluctuations defies current theories of superconductivity

Solid state battery design charges in minutes, lasts for thousands of cycles

Breaking the 10-petawatt limit with a new laser amplification

ROBO SPACE
Shenzhou XVII astronauts set for their first spacewalk

China's commercial space sector achieves milestones with series of successful launches

China's space programme: Five things to know

Long March rockets mark their 500th spaceflight

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.