• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

No, The Lensa AI App Technically Isn’t Stealing Artists’ Work – But It Will Majorly Shake Up The Art World

December 15, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

The Conversation

The Lensa photo and video editing app has shot into social media prominence in recent weeks, after adding a feature that lets you generate stunning digital portraits of yourself in contemporary art styles. It does that for just a small fee and the effort of uploading 10 to 20 different photographs of yourself.

2022 has been the year text-to-media AI technology left the labs and started colonising our visual culture, and Lensa may be the slickest commercial application of that technology to date.

Advertisement

It has lit a fire among social media influencers looking to stand out – and a different kind of fire among the art community. Australian artist Kim Leutwyler told the Guardian she recognised the styles of particular artists – including her own style – in Lensa’s portraits.

Since Midjourney, OpenAI’s Dall-E and the CompVis group’s Stable Diffusion burst onto the scene earlier this year, the ease with which individual artists’ styles can be emulated has sounded warning bells. Artists feel their intellectual property – and perhaps a bit of their soul – has been compromised. But has it?

Well, not as far as existing copyright law sees it.

Advertisement

If it’s not direct theft, what is it?

Text-to-media AI is inherently very complicated, but it is possible for us non-computer-scientists to understand conceptually.

To really grasp the positives and negatives of Lensa, it’s worth taking a couple of steps back to understand how artists’ individual styles can find their way into, and out of, the black boxes that power systems like Lensa.

Lensa is essentially a streamlined and customised front-end for the freely available Stable Diffusion deep learning model. It’s so named because it uses a system called latent diffusion to power its creative output.

Advertisement

The word “latent” is key here. In data science a latent variable is a quality that can’t be measured directly, but can be be inferred from things that can be measured.

When Stable Diffusion was being built, machine-learning algorithms were fed a large number of image-text pairs, and they taught themselves billions of different ways these images and captions could be connected.

This formed a complex knowledge base, none of which is directly intelligible to humans. We might see “modernism” or “thick ink” in its outputs, but Stable Diffusion sees a universe of numbers and connections. And all of this derives from complex mathematics involving the numbers generated from the original image-text pairs.

Advertisement

Because the system ingested both descriptions and image data, it lets us plot a course through the enormous sea of possible outputs by typing in meaningful prompts.

Take the image below as an example. The text prompt included the terms “digital art” and “artstation” – a site that’s home to many contemporary digital artists. During its training, Stable Diffusion learnt to associate these words with certain qualities it identified in the various artworks it was trained on. The result is an image that would fit well on ArtStation.

A fake ArtStation-style portrait made in Stable Diffusion could fit perfectly on the website. Stable Diffusion

What makes Lensa stand out?

So if Stable Diffusion is a text-to-image system where we navigate through different possibilities, then Lensa seems quite different since it takes in images, not words. That’s because one of Lensa’s biggest innovations is streamlining the process of textual inversion.

Advertisement

Lensa takes user-supplied photos and injects them into Stable Diffusion’s existing knowledge base, teaching the system how to “capture” the user’s features so it can then stylise them. While this can be done in the regular Stable Diffusion, it’s far from a streamlined process.

Although you can’t push the images on Lensa in any particular desired direction, the trade-off is a wide variety of options that are almost always impressive. These images borrow ideas from other artists’ work, but do not contain any actual snippets of their work.

The Australian Arts Law Centre makes it clear that while individual artworks are subject to copyright, the stylistic elements and ideas behind them are not. Similarly, the Dave Grossman Designs Inc. v Bortin case in the US established that copyright law does not apply to an art style.

What about the artists?

Nonetheless, the fact that art styles and techniques are now transferable in this way is immensely disruptive and extremely upsetting for artists. As technologies like Lensa becomes more mainstream and artists feel increasingly ripped-off, there may be pressure for legislation to adapt to it.

For artists who work on small-scale jobs, such as creating digital illustrations for influencers or other web enterprises, the future looks challenging.

However, while it is easy to make an artwork that looks good using AI, it’s still difficult to create a very specific work, with a specific subject and context. So regardless of how apps like Lensa shake up the way art is made, the personality of the artist remains an important context for their work.

Advertisement

It may be that artists themselves will need to borrow a page from the influencer’s handbook and invest more effort in publicising themselves.

It’s early days, and it’s going to be a tumultuous decade for producers and consumers of art. But one thing is for sure: the genie is out of the bottle.The Conversation

The rise of AI image generators spells a somewhat uncertain future for artists. Copyright law might need to catch up. Stable Diffusion

Brendan Paul Murphy, Lecturer in Digital Media, CQUniversity Australia

Advertisement

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Mexican Supreme Court decriminalizes abortion in historic shift
  2. Former Treasury secretary Mnuchin raises $2.5 billion for fund – Bloomberg News
  3. Czech central bank chief defends rate hike criticised by Finance Minister
  4. Man Offers Trick Or Treaters A Glimpse Of Jupiter And Saturn Instead Of Candy

Source Link: No, The Lensa AI App Technically Isn’t Stealing Artists’ Work – But It Will Majorly Shake Up The Art World

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Tokyo Is The Biggest City In The World… Or Is It?
  • After 21 Years, Voyager 1 Fires Its Thrusters Again Thanks To Long-Distance Servicing
  • Men Have Double The Chance Of Dying From “Broken Heart Syndrome” That Women Do
  • “Copy” Of Magna Carta Bought For $27.50 Turns Out To Be A 1300 CE Original
  • Long-Lived, Carnivorous, And Freaky: Watch These Snails Lay Eggs Through Their Necks
  • This Radio Announcer Test From The 1920s Would Befuddle Even The Best English Speakers
  • Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr Says People Shouldn’t Take Medical Advice From Him
  • Tiger And Vet Survive Triple Root Canal
  • Why Are Pencils Hexagonal?
  • Why You Shouldn’t Drink Your Own Urine (Can’t Believe We Have To Write This)
  • There Is Something Odd Going On Inside The Moon
  • New Species Of Three-Eyed “Sea Moth” Hunted In Earth’s Oceans 506 Million Years Ago
  • For The First Time, Common Hospital “Superbug” Found To Break Down Medical Plastics
  • First Ever Visible Green Aurorae Seen On Mars
  • New Species Of “Heavenly” Tiny Metallic Poison Dart Frog Discovered In The Amazon
  • Homo Naledi Had Hands That Rock Climbers Would Be Jealous Of
  • Blackouts Around The World As X Class Solar Flare Hits Earth
  • Chimps Use Healing Plants To Treat Each Other’s Wounds And Clean Up After Sex
  • 356-Million-Year-Old Fossil Trackway With Claw Marks Is Probably Oldest Evidence Of Reptiles
  • Vegetarians Feel As Disgusted About Eating Meat As Omnivores Do About Cannibalism
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version