PicoBlog

An artist fights back, and Midjourney has embarrassed themselves

Reid Southen is a successful concept artist who has worked for many of the biggest studios (Marvel, 20th Century Fox, Warner Bros, Paramount etc) on a lot of huge films (Matrix Resurrections, The Hunger Games, Transformers, and Alien, among others).

Yesterday he noticed that the latest, greatest version of an AI-generated art system known as Midjourney was rather too good at drawing lovely art like this

That appeared suspiciously familiar to this iconic still from the Joker:

In modern parlance, I would call Southen’s experiment an instance of red-teaming. It shows that a user of Midjourney could easily inadvertently infringe on copyright.

It also suggests that Midjourney has been trained on high-resolution copyright images, to which they may or may not have a license.

If you were a tech company you might be tempted call this an incident of “data leakage” or perhaps “duplication without attribution.” Sure looks like automated, digital plagiarism to me.

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This was no one off. Some further facts:

  • This took Southen almost no effort

  • The output was not marked as being directly premised on copyrighted work

  • Southen quickly showed that the whole pattern could be easily replicated, multiple times with multiple films. Here’s one set of examples (you can find more on his X account)

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What really bugs me thought is what happened next. Before the day was done, Midjourney retaliated - by revoking Southen’s privileges and wiping his history.

If that’s not consciousness of guilt, I don’t know what is.

(Paraphrasing Scooby Doo, they’d have gotten away with it too, if it wasn't for those meddling red-teamers.)

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Speaking of what did they know and when did they know it, an excerpt from MidJourney’s own Terms of Service:

Good to know that they have heard of the concept of infringement. That’s a start.

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Ed Newton-Rex is a composer and AI researcher who bravely quit a potentially very lucrative gig at Stable Diffusion, another generative AI company, because of his discomfort with what was going on.

He posted this yesterday. I gave him the last words, his own thoughts on what transpired yesterday:

Gary Marcus loves AI, in principle, but hates a lot of the ways in which it is being used.

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Christie Applegate

Update: 2024-12-03