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Flux (also known as FLUX.1) is a text-to-image model developed by Black Forest Labs, based in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany. Black Forest Labs was founded by former employees of Stability AI. As with other text-to-image models, Flux generates images from natural language descriptions, called prompts.
An image conditioned on the prompt "an astronaut riding a horse, by Hiroshige", generated by Stable Diffusion 3.5, a large-scale text-to-image model first released in 2022. A text-to-image model is a machine learning model which takes an input natural language description and produces an image matching that description.
Selected sample questions generated by the query generator for a Visual Turing Test. The Visual Turing Test is “an operator-assisted device that produces a stochastic sequence of binary questions from a given test image”. [1] The query engine produces a sequence of questions that have unpredictable answers given the history of questions.
Attempts by AP journalists to test Midjourney's new policy on Wednesday by asking it to make an image of “Trump and Biden shaking hands at the beach” led to a “Banned Prompt Detected” warning.
DALL-E was revealed by OpenAI in a blog post on 5 January 2021, and uses a version of GPT-3 [5] modified to generate images.. On 6 April 2022, OpenAI announced DALL-E 2, a successor designed to generate more realistic images at higher resolutions that "can combine concepts, attributes, and styles". [6]
Similarly, an image model prompted with the text "a photo of a CEO" might disproportionately generate images of white male CEOs, [112] if trained on a racially biased data set. A number of methods for mitigating bias have been attempted, such as altering input prompts [113] and reweighting training data. [114]
In December 2022, Midjourney was used to generate the images for an AI-generated children's book that was created over a weekend. Titled Alice and Sparkle, the book features a young girl who builds a robot that becomes self-aware. The creator, Ammaar Reeshi, used Midjourney to generate a large number of images, from which he chose 13 for the ...
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