Ty Harper Posted Thursday at 01:57 AM Share Posted Thursday at 01:57 AM Stunning. majoraxis and ntblowz 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrSMW Posted Thursday at 07:23 AM Share Posted Thursday at 07:23 AM Nice, but I don't get the AI bit? I was expecting an entire ad created with just AI and was watching speechless...but the BTS revealed a 110 crew, what looked like a proper actors/filming/crew job and production to me? Unless the BTS was also AI? 😉 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Super Members BTM_Pix Posted Thursday at 08:33 AM Super Members Share Posted Thursday at 08:33 AM 1 hour ago, MrSMW said: Unless the BTS was also AI? 😉 Indeed it was. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrSMW Posted Thursday at 09:08 AM Share Posted Thursday at 09:08 AM 33 minutes ago, BTM_Pix said: Indeed it was. Really? The ad and the BTS were both fully AI? Nothing real about any of it? If so, I am so out of touch with this world and the entire industry is fucked, - get out now 😵 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Super Members BTM_Pix Posted Thursday at 09:31 AM Super Members Share Posted Thursday at 09:31 AM 17 minutes ago, MrSMW said: Really? The ad and the BTS were both fully AI? The voiceover was real. This is the card at the end of the video. 18 minutes ago, MrSMW said: Nothing real about any of it? Well, there’s the rub. Whatever it was trained on was certainly very real. Looking at this frame, I’m pretty sure if you went through enough of PotatoJet’s YouTube content you’d find the ,shall we say, “inspiration” for it. Tim Sewell and Ty Harper 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrSMW Posted Thursday at 10:39 AM Share Posted Thursday at 10:39 AM I wonder just how close we are to movie level now then... But I suppose the material still needs to exist to pull together to make this kind of thing and as a commercial and BTS, enough exists, but not for any kind of real movie that would require a unique script and acting. At least not without going CGI. It's crazy how good this stuff is becoming and if I was a youngster, I certainly would not be looking at the more traditional aspects of this industry such as cameras, lenses, lighting, sound etc, but what skills I could develop in my parents basement from my laptop. But for me personally, that would be a hard no as it would not interest me and I'd rather be a lumberjack or something. Leon Postma 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
eatstoomuchjam Posted Thursday at 10:50 AM Share Posted Thursday at 10:50 AM It's definitely improved for very short takes. While I didn't watch the whole thing, the bits I skipped around to see were all very short clips. Anyplace with letters was also a give-away (the wording on the truck). I also wonder how many "takes" they had to do of each clip to get one that looked good and where the physics were mostly realistic. I saw a few clips that seemed in the "weird physics" space - that continues to be a major weakness of AI-generated video. But the main thing that could still slow down the enshittification of everything through AI is that AI-generated material is still not able to be copyrighted - at least not in the US. How long that lasts before the shitheads in Congress/Senate/Presidency "fix" it? Unknown. Davide DB and Ty Harper 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Super Members BTM_Pix Posted Thursday at 12:26 PM Super Members Share Posted Thursday at 12:26 PM 1 hour ago, eatstoomuchjam said: Anyplace with letters was also a give-away The corruption on the license plate coincidentally features a fragment of the plate of the car that images of may well have been used to train it with. The car is a Porsche factory one that was provided to reviewers so enough images of it from different sources to train it. Could just be a massive coincidence of course ..... I think a new parlour game in the upcoming years when generating this stuff becomes more readily/instantly available will be image makers entering a specific prompt describing one of their own images that they have put online and determining how much has been lifted from their work based on the output that comes back. Andrew Reid and eatstoomuchjam 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ty Harper Posted Thursday at 01:18 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 01:18 PM 2 hours ago, MrSMW said: But I suppose the material still needs to exist to pull together to make this kind of thing and as a commercial and BTS, enough exists, but not for any kind of real movie that would require a unique script and acting. Yes I'd agree that that is where we are at this moment - but obvi that will eventually change. At the very least I'd think that you won't need as much location shooting, b-roll/alternate shots, human extras, etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ty Harper Posted Thursday at 01:24 PM Author Share Posted Thursday at 01:24 PM 55 minutes ago, BTM_Pix said: I think a new parlour game in the upcoming years when generating this stuff becomes more readily/instantly available will be image makers entering a specific prompt describing one of their own images that they have put online and determining how much has been lifted from their work based on the output that comes back Absolutely! I first saw the video via an IG acct so I used Google Images to search for the original video and all I got was what seemed like all the images the image I clipped was trained on. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Marcio Kabke Pinheiro Posted Thursday at 11:45 PM Share Posted Thursday at 11:45 PM The AI was trained about overrigging a camera with Caleb Pike. eatstoomuchjam and ntblowz 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Administrators Andrew Reid Posted Friday at 12:51 PM Administrators Share Posted Friday at 12:51 PM Potato AI. Davide DB 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EduPortas Posted yesterday at 12:00 AM Share Posted yesterday at 12:00 AM 11 hours ago, Andrew Reid said: Potato AI. The advertisement industry created its own problem by allowing minus 1 second cuts to be the norm in most ads. For short stuff like most ads AI is fine. For a feature film with long takes of real human emotions not so much. The recent passing of Lynch should help us keep that in consideration. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KnightsFan Posted yesterday at 12:59 AM Share Posted yesterday at 12:59 AM 49 minutes ago, EduPortas said: For a feature film with long takes of real human emotions not so much. *yet It's hard for me to believe that 20 years from now, AI will be unable to produce videos of any type that are indistinguishable from videos shot with cameras. On 1/23/2025 at 2:31 AM, BTM_Pix said: Whatever it was trained on was certainly very real. Looking at this frame, I’m pretty sure if you went through enough of PotatoJet’s YouTube content you’d find the ,shall we say, “inspiration” for it. It's an interesting discussion how much diverse training needs to be given to a model before its output is presumed original. I mean, we're all trained on images from other artists, and at the moment the primary difference is that our brains are way less adept at permanently storing precise information. And at this point, these models have ingested more videos than any of us have seen, so the inspiration is even more spread out than a human's. It's probably not that far off before some of these big companies start collecting training data straight from the real world, that combines binocular vision, audio, and other sensors into a combined stream, like our own. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ty Harper Posted 15 hours ago Author Share Posted 15 hours ago 14 hours ago, KnightsFan said: It's hard for me to believe that 20 years from now, AI will be unable to produce videos of any type that are indistinguishable from videos shot with cameras. Agreed. 10 years from now even. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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