Current:Home > StocksNew tools help artists fight AI by directly disrupting the systems -VitalWealth Strategies
New tools help artists fight AI by directly disrupting the systems
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-11 04:42:39
Artists have been fighting back on a number of fronts against artificial intelligence companies that they say steal their works to train AI models — including launching class-action lawsuits and speaking out at government hearings.
Now, visual artists are taking a more direct approach: They're starting to use tools that contaminate and confuse the AI systems themselves.
One such tool, Nightshade, won't help artists combat existing AI models that have already been trained on their creative works. But Ben Zhao, who leads the research team at the University of Chicago that built the soon-to-be-launched digital tool, says it promises to break future AI models.
"You can think of Nightshade as adding a small poison pill inside an artwork in such a way that it's literally trying to confuse the training model on what is actually in the image," Zhao says.
How Nightshade works
AI models like DALL-E or Stable Diffusion usually identify images through the words used to describe them in the metadata. For instance, a picture of a dog pairs with the word "dog." Zhao says
Nightshade confuses this pairing by creating a mismatch between image and text.
"So it will, for example, take an image of a dog, alter it in subtle ways, so that it still looks like a dog to you and I — except to the AI, it now looks like a cat," Zhao says.
Zhao says he hopes Nightshade will be able to pollute future AI models to such a degree that AI companies will be forced to either revert to old versions of their platforms — or stop using artists' works to create new ones.
"I would like to bring about a world where AI has limits, AI has guardrails, AI has ethical boundaries that are enforced by tools," he says.
Nascent weapons in an artist's AI-disrupting arsenal
Nightshade isn't the only nascent weapon in an artist's AI-disrupting arsenal.
Zhao's team also recently launched Glaze, a tool which subtly changes the pixels in an artwork to make it hard for an AI model to mimic a specific artist's style.
"Glaze is just a very first step in people coming together to build tools to help artists," says fashion photographer Jingna Zhang, the founder of Cara, a new online community focused on promoting human-created (as opposed to AI-generated) art. "From what I saw while I tested with my own work, it does interrupt the final output when an image is trained on my style." Zhang says plans are in the works to embed Glaze and Nightshade in Cara.
And then there's Kudurru, created by the for-profit company Spawning.ai. The resource, now in beta, tracks scrapers' IP addresses and blocks them or sends back unwanted content, such as an extended middle finger, or the classic "Rickroll" Internet trolling prank that spams unsuspecting users with a the music video for British singer Rick Astley's 1980s pop hit, "Never Gonna Give You Up."
"We want artists to be able to communicate differently to the bots and the scrapers used for AI purposes, rather than giving them all of their information that they would like to provide to their fans," says Spawning co-founder Jordan Meyer.
Artists are thrilled
Artist Kelly McKernan says they cannot wait to get their hands on these tools.
"I'm just like, let's go!" says the Nashville-based painter and illustrator and single mom. "Let's poison the datasets! Let's do this!"
McKernan says they have been waging a war on AI since last year, when they discovered their name was being used as an AI prompt, and then that more than 50 of their paintings had been scraped for AI models from LAION-5B, a massive image dataset.
Earlier this year, McKernan joined a class-action lawsuit alleging Stability AI and other such companies used billions of online images to train their systems without compensation or consent. The case is ongoing.
"I'm right in the middle of it, along with so many artists," McKernan says.
In the meantime, McKernan says the new digital tools help them feel like they're doing something aggressive and immediate to safeguard their work in a world of slow-moving lawsuits and even slower-moving legislation.
McKernan adds they are disappointed, but not surprised, that President Joe Biden's newly signed executive order on artificial intelligence fails to address AI's impact on the creative industries.
"So, for now, this is kind of like, alright, my house keeps getting broken into, so I'm gonna protect myself with some, like, mace and an ax!" they say of the defensive opportunities afforded by the new tools.
Debates about the efficacy of these tools
While artists are excited to use these tools, some AI security experts and members of the development community are concerned about their efficacy, especially in the long term.
"These types of defenses seem to be effective against many things right now," says Gautam Kamath, who researches data privacy and AI model robustness at Canada's University of Waterloo. "But there's no kind of guarantee that they'll still be effective a year from now, ten years from now. Heck, even a week from now, we don't know for sure."
Social media platforms have also lit up lately with heated debates questioning how effective these tools really are. The conversations sometimes involve the creators of the tools.
Spawning's Meyer says his company is committed to making Kudurru robust.
"There are unknown attack vectors for Kudurru," he says. "If people start finding ways to get around it, we're going to have to adapt."
"This is not about writing a fun little tool that can exist in some isolated world where some people care, some people don't, and the consequences are small and we can move on," says the University of Chicago's Zhao. "This involves real people, their livelihoods, and this actually matters. So, yeah, we will keep going as long as it takes."
An AI developer weighs in
The biggest AI industry players — Google, Meta, OpenAI and Stability AI — did not respond to, or turned down, NPR's requests for comment.
But Yacine Jernite, who leads the machine learning and society team at the AI developer platform Hugging Face, says that even if these tools work really well, that wouldn't be such a bad thing.
"We see them as very much a positive development," Jernite says.
Jernite says data should be broadly available for research and development. But AI companies should also respect artists' wishes to opt out of having their work scraped.
"Any tool that is going to allow artists to express their consent very much fits with our approach of trying to get as many perspectives into what makes a training data set," he says.
Jernite says several artists whose work was used to train AI models shared on the Hugging Face platform have spoken out against the practice and, in some cases, asked that the models be removed. The developers don't have to comply.
"But we found that developers tend to respect the artists' wishes and remove those models," Jernite says.
Still, many artists, including McKernan, don't trust AI companies' opt out programs. "They don't all offer them," the artist says. "And those that do, often don't make the process easy."
Audio and digital stories edited by Meghan Collins Sullivan. Audio produced by Isabella Gomez-Sarmiento.
veryGood! (1547)
Related
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Who could replace Joe Biden as the 2024 Democratic nominee?
- Baltimore man arrested in deadly shooting of 12-year-old girl
- 'This can't be real': He left his daughter alone in a hot car for hours. She died.
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- What to know about Kamala Harris, leading contender to be Democratic presidential nominee
- Emotional Baseball Hall of Fame speeches filled with humility, humor, appreciation
- Tour de France Stage 21: Tadej Pogačar wins third Tour de France title
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- LeBron James selected as Team USA male flagbearer for Paris Olympics opening ceremony
Ranking
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Seven people wounded by gunfire during a large midnight gathering in Anderson, Indiana
- Utah death row inmate who is imprisoned for 1998 murder asks parole board for mercy ahead of hearing
- Air travel delays continue, though most airlines have recovered from global tech outage
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- Israeli airstrikes kill at least 13 people in Gaza refugee camps as cease-fire talks grind on
- Here's what can happen when you max out your 401(k)
- At least 11 dead, dozens missing after a highway bridge in China collapses after heavy storms
Recommendation
Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
Real Housewives of New Jersey Star Melissa Gorga Shares the 1 Essential She Has in Her Bag at All Times
Andre Seldon Jr., Utah State football player and former Belleville High School star, dies in apparent drowning
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, The End of Time
Average rate on 30
3 'missing' people found safe, were never in car when it was submerged off Texas pier, police say
Green Bay Packers reach three-year extension with Kenny Clark on eve of training camp
Blake Lively Reacts to Ryan Reynolds Divorce Rumors