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Boston Globe highlights the perils of using AI images as content

Boston Globe oped article illustrated with an AI-generated X-ray image showing a wrist with three, rather than two, bones

A week ago, some editor in the Globe's oped department decided to illustrate an opinion piece about health-care rage with an X-ray of a clenched fist. So the editor went to Adobe's image library, found a whole series of AI-generated "skeleton fist" images and downloaded the coolest looking one.

Only problem, as orthopedic surgeons and other doctors have been snickering about ever since, non-mutant humans only have two bones connecting their wrists to their arms, not three. And finger bones are normally connected to the wrist bones, not just sort of floating around inside your sausage fingers (also, this image of a skeleton wearing boxing gloves would have been far superior, in our opinion).

What's also humerus about the whole thing: As of this morning, the "X-ray" remains at the top of the article on bostonglobe.com.

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Comments

on a bus shelter at Porter Square in Somerville for months now, and it looks hideous. It's supposed to be a rocket ship shedding gold coins, but it looks like something a 3 year old made out of clay. It's all weird angles and asymmetry.

But maybe this is an honest signal of their attention to detail, so I guess that's... useful to know?

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The problem isn't merely that A-I will get things wrong. The problem is that as we blunder forward with it anyway, nobody will care that it gets things wrong.

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Who's the CEO over at the Boston Globe again? Just curious.

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I am not an orthopedic surgeon but that is a common side-effect due to intensive, emergency treatment of end-stage boneitis.

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(you know)

/snark

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To those in need

If the Globe won't pay artists for their work, why should I continue to pay my subscription?

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Washington Post - "Democracy dies in darkness."

NY Times -"All the news that's fit to print."

Boston Globe "Interns reporting from CambrVille. Help!"

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I sincerely doubt that image could be traced to an actual living human being.

I imagine that arm would make a great case study!

I see what you did there

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