The Fort Worth Press - Gemini's flawed AI racial images seen as warning of tech titans' power

USD -
AED 3.6725
AFN 63.501203
ALL 81.529489
AMD 375.111005
ANG 1.789884
AOA 917.999598
ARS 1378.494198
AUD 1.398122
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.696752
BAM 1.670018
BBD 2.021074
BDT 123.120931
BGN 1.668102
BHD 0.377344
BIF 2983.85754
BMD 1
BND 1.277223
BOB 6.933593
BRL 4.967697
BSD 1.003407
BTN 94.06767
BWP 13.491474
BYN 2.823304
BYR 19600
BZD 2.018171
CAD 1.36708
CDF 2310.999939
CHF 0.784635
CLF 0.022619
CLP 890.229776
CNY 6.824798
CNH 6.831475
COP 3571.47
CRC 457.171157
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.15346
CZK 20.80795
DJF 178.685179
DKK 6.38298
DOP 60.386896
DZD 132.50473
EGP 52.009303
ERN 15
ETB 157.950756
EUR 0.85413
FJD 2.217904
FKP 0.740532
GBP 0.741065
GEL 2.690259
GGP 0.740532
GHS 11.10817
GIP 0.740532
GMD 72.999808
GNF 8806.991628
GTQ 7.669581
GYD 209.952866
HKD 7.832095
HNL 26.659209
HRK 6.4378
HTG 131.351211
HUF 311.779728
IDR 17296
ILS 3.009035
IMP 0.740532
INR 94.082497
IQD 1314.468201
IRR 1319499.999977
ISK 122.81983
JEP 0.740532
JMD 158.959624
JOD 0.708958
JPY 159.630047
KES 129.211231
KGS 87.4274
KHR 4016.616359
KMF 421.000179
KPW 899.95002
KRW 1480.370022
KWD 0.30802
KYD 0.836208
KZT 464.965162
LAK 22138.636519
LBP 89858.937248
LKR 318.857162
LRD 184.634433
LSL 16.494808
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.345262
MAD 9.265398
MDL 17.188821
MGA 4161.845762
MKD 52.659459
MMK 2099.761028
MNT 3579.096956
MOP 8.094644
MRU 40.057552
MUR 46.740161
MVR 15.450258
MWK 1739.624204
MXN 17.352799
MYR 3.965999
MZN 63.910071
NAD 16.494808
NGN 1351.029947
NIO 36.930302
NOK 9.288545
NPR 150.509557
NZD 1.698235
OMR 0.384497
PAB 1.003488
PEN 3.448364
PGK 4.413987
PHP 60.4295
PKR 279.73666
PLN 3.62531
PYG 6311.960448
QAR 3.658464
RON 4.349896
RSD 100.23301
RUB 75.095532
RWF 1466.294941
SAR 3.750603
SBD 8.048395
SCR 13.712099
SDG 600.466171
SEK 9.219065
SGD 1.276105
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.650078
SLL 20969.496166
SOS 573.470581
SRD 37.457977
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.921395
SVC 8.780484
SYP 110.632441
SZL 16.48863
THB 32.37699
TJS 9.447326
TMT 3.505
TND 2.91772
TOP 2.40776
TRY 44.925335
TTD 6.80289
TWD 31.552503
TZS 2600.000509
UAH 44.026505
UGX 3717.808593
UYU 39.893265
UZS 12170.349023
VES 482.15515
VND 26327.5
VUV 118.032476
WST 2.725399
XAF 560.113225
XAG 0.013134
XAU 0.000212
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.80844
XDR 0.696601
XOF 560.115617
XPF 101.833707
YER 238.649682
ZAR 16.51235
ZMK 9001.197601
ZMW 19.090436
ZWL 321.999592
  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    15.18

    +0.53%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.1

    -0.13%

  • RELX

    -0.2250

    36.045

    -0.62%

  • RBGPF

    -4.0600

    64.94

    -6.25%

  • NGG

    1.0000

    86.6

    +1.15%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.83

    -0%

  • RIO

    -0.0800

    100.2

    -0.08%

  • BCE

    0.1600

    23.89

    +0.67%

  • VOD

    0.2400

    15.55

    +1.54%

  • GSK

    0.2800

    55.98

    +0.5%

  • BP

    -0.0550

    46.315

    -0.12%

  • BCC

    0.6200

    82.86

    +0.75%

  • AZN

    0.7600

    195.57

    +0.39%

  • BTI

    0.7000

    56.87

    +1.23%

  • JRI

    -0.0550

    12.945

    -0.42%

Gemini's flawed AI racial images seen as warning of tech titans' power
Gemini's flawed AI racial images seen as warning of tech titans' power / Photo: © AFP

Gemini's flawed AI racial images seen as warning of tech titans' power

For people at the trend-setting tech festival here, the scandal that erupted after Google's Gemini chatbot cranked out images of Black and Asian Nazi soldiers was seen as a warning about the power artificial intelligence can give tech titans.

Text size:

Google CEO Sundar Pichai last month slammed as "completely unacceptable" errors by his company's Gemini AI app, after gaffes such as the images of ethnically diverse Nazi troops forced it to temporarily stop users from creating pictures of people.

Social media users mocked and criticized Google for the historically inaccurate images, like those showing a female black US senator from the 1800s -- when the first such senator was not elected until 1992.

"We definitely messed up on the image generation," Google co-founder Sergey Brin said at a recent AI "hackathon," adding that the company should have tested Gemini more thoroughly.

Folks interviewed at the popular South by Southwest arts and tech festival in Austin said the Gemini stumble highlights the inordinate power a handful of companies have over the artificial intelligence platforms that are poised to change the way people live and work.

"Essentially, it was too 'woke,'" said Joshua Weaver, a lawyer and tech entrepreneur, meaning Google had gone overboard in its effort to project inclusion and diversity.

Google quickly corrected its errors, but the underlying problem remains, said Charlie Burgoyne, chief executive of the Valkyrie applied science lab in Texas.

He equated Google's fix of Gemini to putting a Band-Aid on a bullet wound.

While Google long had the luxury of having time to refine its products, it is now scrambling in an AI race with Microsoft, OpenAI, Anthropic and others, Weaver noted, adding, "They are moving faster than they know how to move."

Mistakes made in an effort at cultural sensitivity are flashpoints, particularly given the tense political divisions in the United States, a situation exacerbated by Elon Musk's X platform, the former Twitter.

"People on Twitter are very gleeful to celebrate any embarrassing thing that happens in tech," Weaver said, adding that reaction to the Nazi gaffe was "overblown."

The mishap did, however, call into question the degree of control those using AI tools have over information, he maintained.

In the coming decade, the amount of information -- or misinformation -- created by AI could dwarf that generated by people, meaning those controlling AI safeguards will have huge influence on the world, Weaver said.

- Bias-in, Bias-out -

Karen Palmer, an award-winning mixed-reality creator with Interactive Films Ltd., said she could imagine a future in which someone gets into a robo-taxi and, "if the AI scans you and thinks that there are any outstanding violations against you... you'll be taken into the local police station," not your intended destination.

AI is trained on mountains of data and can be put to work on a growing range of tasks, from image or audio generation to determining who gets a loan or whether a medical scan detects cancer.

But that data comes from a world rife with cultural bias, disinformation and social inequity -- not to mention online content that can include casual chats between friends or intentionally exaggerated and provocative posts -- and AI models can echo those flaws.

With Gemini, Google engineers tried to rebalance the algorithms to provide results better reflecting human diversity.

The effort backfired.

"It can really be tricky, nuanced and subtle to figure out where bias is and how it's included," said technology lawyer Alex Shahrestani, a managing partner at Promise Legal law firm for tech companies.

Even well-intentioned engineers involved with training AI can't help but bring their own life experience and subconscious bias to the process, he and others believe.

Valkyrie's Burgoyne also castigated big tech for keeping the inner workings of generative AI hidden in "black boxes," so users are unable to detect any hidden biases.

"The capabilities of the outputs have far exceeded our understanding of the methodology," he said.

Experts and activists are calling for more diversity in teams creating AI and related tools, and greater transparency as to how they work -- particularly when algorithms rewrite users' requests to "improve" results.

A challenge is how to appropriately build in perspectives of the world's many and diverse communities, Jason Lewis of the Indigenous Futures Resource Center and related groups said here.

At Indigenous AI, Jason works with farflung indigenous communities to design algorithms that use their data ethically while reflecting their perspectives on the world, something he does not always see in the "arrogance" of big tech leaders.

His own work, he told a group, stands in "such a contrast from Silicon Valley rhetoric, where there's a top-down 'Oh, we're doing this because we're going to benefit all humanity' bullshit, right?"

His audience laughed.

S.Palmer--TFWP