AI Learning Inhibition Function

I would like to have the ability to interfere with the AI’s learning when exporting pictures, etc.I think it would be helpful if I could easily interfere with learning when posting to X, mastodon, misskey, pixiv, etc.I apologize if there is a similar feature that I just can’t find.Thank you for your consideration.

Krita has no AI therefore this will not happen. If it is about a third party AI tool, you should ask on their forum.

If it’s about trying to somehow keep your images out of someone else’s AI, there are tools out there that claim to make that happen (without much proof though) but currently they’re all closed source which makes integrating them impossible for licensing reasons.

I do not intend to use AI.I just want to easily cover the noise that inhibits AI learning when exporting illustrations, if possible.

Given that krita is open source, the encryption algorithm may soon be reverse cracked……

I see… open source makes it easier to analyze… I hadn’t thought of that…

You might be interested in this:
Assassin - #5 by rohithela

and this:
Anyone got Nightshade to work in Linux? - #9 by Mythmaker

and this:
AI related meta thread - #297 by sooz

and this:
AI related meta thread - #171 by Lesqwe56

The forum has lots of useful and interesting information :slight_smile:

No current methods exist which properly prevent training without heavily artifacting your image, the only way to truly prevent AI training on your art is to not post it publicly online.

The mark of a good encryption is that it doesn’t matter if the algorithm is public or not. You can easily encrypt images already. AI won’t be able to use them and so is anyone else. Encryption is not what you need to make it unreadable for AI to be trained on.

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It would be great if we could complete the process of putting noise that inhibits AI learning on board within Krita.

There is currently no evidence that these actually work but you can try out if you want. All the current methods (glaze, nightshade and so on) use some form of Fourier transform, you can find that filter in the g’mic filters. But it’s probably just as a placebo as the other tools and it will visually degrade your image, ruining it for everyone else, too (just like the other tools). Only difference is that the other tools use specific noise which is ironically AI generated too.