sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al to Technology@beehaw.org · 5 months agoAstronomers discover technique to spot AI fakes using galaxy-measurement toolsarstechnica.comexternal-linkmessage-square26fedilinkarrow-up1118arrow-down10cross-posted to: artificial_intel@lemmy.mltechnology@lemmy.zip
arrow-up1118arrow-down1external-linkAstronomers discover technique to spot AI fakes using galaxy-measurement toolsarstechnica.comsabreW4K3@lazysoci.al to Technology@beehaw.org · 5 months agomessage-square26fedilinkcross-posted to: artificial_intel@lemmy.mltechnology@lemmy.zip
minus-squaresuperkretlinkfedilinkarrow-up63·5 months agoIs there anything astronomers can’t find out from a couple of pixels?
minus-squarespaghetti_hitchens@kbin.runlinkfedilinkarrow-up51·5 months agoThey’re still trying to find a computer capable of measuring the mass of your mom
minus-squareCanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.orglinkfedilinkarrow-up24·5 months agoThat’s like, their whole life, it sounds like. Geologists stare at rock formations, astronomers stare at fuzzy pixels. In both cases they study crazy things from deep time, but in a way that would slowly drive me mad.
minus-squareryannathans@aussie.zonelinkfedilinkarrow-up6·5 months agoYou can tell a lot from how a CMOS or CCD picks up a couple photons
Is there anything astronomers can’t find out from a couple of pixels?
They’re still trying to find a computer capable of measuring the mass of your mom
Uncalled for but 10/10 execution
🔥
That’s like, their whole life, it sounds like.
Geologists stare at rock formations, astronomers stare at fuzzy pixels. In both cases they study crazy things from deep time, but in a way that would slowly drive me mad.
You can tell a lot from how a CMOS or CCD picks up a couple photons