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Then you can "Enhance".

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vxq9yj2pVWk

Joking aside, this does illustrate the "magical" properties of technology to the layperson. As a corollary, failure modes end up quite suprising and hard to reason about without a certain amount of proficiency in these technologies.



Enhancing works with trained AI these days

Maybe not for evidence collection, but for pleasing a human being to go follow a lead sure


I've seen some examples of this. It's very clearly trained on a white-male dataset.

I've also seen it "enhance" an image of a resistor into a human face.

I don't care how much AI you have, you can't add back data that wasn't in the original image. The best you can hope to do is get a vague approximation, and you must have a very, very good (comprehensive) training dataset for that to be remotely viable.


The premise of the technology is not adding more information to the image. But rather realizing that the image may have a description that is a lot smaller than its file size suggests; then it becomes a matter of rendering it using world-aware encodings. The resolution may appear higher but it is actually a filtration of the original data. And there’s nothing to say that simply because the current technology is overfitted to their present-day datasets, that such a filter (that is actually useful for common images, or enhancement by leveraging known/ few-shot other examples consisting of the same target object) cannot exist.


> It's very clearly trained on a white-male dataset.

TBF the Beatles look amazing in the Peter Jackson documentary, though the original material was shot on 16mm.


There is a world of difference upscaling something digital, and something analog. 16mm film actually does contain more information than could be shown with the original film. We have better scanning techniques today that can extract that information.

Upscaling something digital, does require creating information out of thin air, on the other hand.


>Maybe not for evidence collection,

Kyle Rittenhouse was possibly almost convicted due to "enhance with AI".


Bring it up with the appeals court in the event it occurs, unless you run out of money. Dont run out of money.


Well, that and the explanation is missing the details. Conceptually being able to construct something like that from XOR and NOT primitives is stuff from undergrad computer engineering curriculum. But it's certainly a respectable feat to find this combination of compression format and the vulnerability therein of all the supported formats, and think to apply it like this.




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