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Google Gemini AI, is the topic of a heated debate. The controversy revolves around promoting diversity and maintaining historical accuracy in AI-generated...
Image Credits: unsplash
Google Gemini AI, is the topic of a heated debate. The controversy revolves around promoting diversity and maintaining historical accuracy in AI-generated images.
Google Gemini AI recently faced criticism for having generated historically inaccurate images. This led to further backlash from the internet. So much so that Google put up a pause on the Image Gen AI feature of the chatbot.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai addressed the issue head-on, acknowledging that some of Gemini AI’s responses were “unacceptable.” The company immediately paused image generation and promised to release an improved version soon.
He further added,” No AI is perfect, especially at this emerging stage of this industry’s development, but we know the bar is high for us and we will keep at it for however long it takes”.
Beyond the controversy, Gemini(formerly known as Bard) highlights broader concerns:
Google Gemini AI isn’t the first AI model to face trouble with diversity and bias. OpenAI faced similar challenges with DALL-E 2, ChatGPT, etc, where biased training data led to problematic outputs. To address this, they hid diversity terms in prompts.
As Google works to resolve Gemini’s flaws, the tech community awaits. To have the right balance in supporting diversity without historical inaccuracy remains a challenge.
The coming update will be another step in Gemini’s evolution. It’s not just an AI tool, it’s a reflection of our complex relationship with technology.
After the controversial turn of Gemini’s biased results, Google decided to stop the image generation feature in the app. The CEO of Google, Sundar Pichai also addressed the matter and shared his concerns. Google has announced that it’s working on the issue and will be trying its best to resolve the matter.
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