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this post was submitted on 29 May 2025
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Technology
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There are AI plugins for all of them... but they're optional for now (2025). Kdenlive is working on integrating correction and background removal generative AI. Main offender is Adobe, which is the "standard" workflow for most media processing, and is forcing AI everywhere, including something as simple as color curves... then slapping a tag of "made using AI" in the output file. Inkscape is foremost a SVG editor, but Adobe Illustrator already has generative AI to allow stuff like rotating vector graphics "in 3D", it's only time for Inkscape to follow suit. Even Windows Notepad got some AI features recently 🤦
JPG compression itself is a sort of "AI light", where it analyzes chunks of an image for perceptual similarity, to drop "irrelevant" data. Adobe has added a feature to do that, but using AI in the analysis, tweaking/generating blocks so there are more similarities. It's likely others will follow suit: "it's lossy compression after all, right? ...right?"
Lossy audio encoding (MP3, etc), also has a perceptual profile to increase block similarities, they're adding AI there the same way as in images.
Videos... well, they're a mix of images and audio, with temporal sequences already breaking images into key frames, intermediates, generated, etc. Generatively tweaking some of those to make them more similar, within perceptual limits, also improves compression.
Main issue lies at the source: cameras
Unless you're using a large sensor professional camera, all the "prosumer" and smartphone sensors, are... let's put it mildly... UTTER CRAP. They're too small, with lenses too bad, unable to avoid CoC, diffraction, or chromatic aberration.
Before it even spits out a "RAW" image, it's already been processed to hell and the way back. Modern consumer "better" cameras... use more AI to do a "better" processing job. What you see, is way past the point of whatever the camera has ever seen.
...and then, it goes into the software pipeline. ☠️