this post was submitted on 02 Oct 2024
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As families desperately seek to find missing loved ones and communities grapple with immeasurable losses of both life and property in the wake of Hurricane Helene, AI slop scammers appear to be capitalizing on the moment for personal gain.

A Facebook account called "Coastal Views" usually shares calmer AI imagery of nature-filled beachside scenes. The account's banner image showcases a signpost reading "OBX Live," OBX being shorthand for North Carolina's Outer Banks islands.

But starting this weekend, the account shifted its approach dramatically, as first flagged by a social media user on X.

Instead of posting "photos" of leaping dolphins and sandy beaches, the account suddenly started publishing images of flooded mountain neighborhoods, submerged houses, and dogs sitting on top of roofs.

But instead of spreading vital information to those affected by the natural disaster, or at the very least sharing real photos of the destruction, the account is seemingly trying to use AI to cash in on all the attention the hurricane has been getting.

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[–] cheddar@programming.dev 8 points 2 days ago (4 children)
[–] Evotech@lemmy.world 13 points 1 day ago (2 children)

There is so much wrong with it. Much more than the red circles indicates.

Like most ai stuff it looks good at a glance, but when you start to zoom in you see all kinds of weird shapes, extra bits, like an extra roof, or a roof that blends into the brush behind. Or just straight stuff that makes you go "huh, that's just nothing"

[–] XeroxCool@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

While I can see lots of things like drunk windows and droopy rooflines, this really doesn't strike me as obviously AI. Have you ever been to a mountain town of former coal glory? PA/WV has many towns like that. 150-year old buildings fighting frost heaves, people tacking on decks just to bring a little joy, signs that look 50 year sout of place. Sucks that AI has so much overlap with a poor town of 200 people.

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