Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

The ‘first’ ransomware attack run by AI still needed a human

You can now adjust the pace and expressiveness of Siri in the latest iOS 27 beta

US investors will soon have access to SK Hynix, another memory maker driving the AI ​​boom

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    The ‘first’ ransomware attack run by AI still needed a human

    7 July 2026

    If you use Google, you train its AI. See how you can opt out.

    6 July 2026

    Amazon will stop accepting new customers for Mechanical Turk

    6 July 2026

    Yes, we use OpenClaw to this day

    5 July 2026

    Midjourney wants Hollywood studios to reveal the details of their use of artificial intelligence

    5 July 2026
  • Apps

    You can now adjust the pace and expressiveness of Siri in the latest iOS 27 beta

    7 July 2026

    Apple is bringing back card payments for Apple Account purchases in India after a four-year hiatus

    6 July 2026

    WhatsApp now allows you to reserve usernames

    5 July 2026

    Podcasting platform Riverside is getting into the newsletter game

    4 July 2026

    Threads adds new features to Live Chats as it expands access

    4 July 2026
  • Crypto

    Venice AI goes unicorn with $65M Series A as first privacy AI platform takes off

    1 July 2026

    Crypto Exchange OKX wants AI agents to hire and pay each other

    30 June 2026

    Startup Battlefield 200 applications close today

    27 May 2026

    5 days left: Save up to $410 on Disrupt 2026 passes

    25 May 2026

    As crypto cools, a16z crypto raises $2.2 billion in capital

    6 May 2026
  • Fintech

    India’s payments chief believes artificial intelligence will play a big part in the next era of digital payments development

    28 June 2026

    Early Bird pricing ends tonight for the Founder Summit

    26 June 2026

    4 days left to save up to $190 on Founder Summit 2026

    23 June 2026

    Robinhood’s note on 10% layoffs shows that blaming AI doesn’t cut it

    17 June 2026

    Anthropic’s latest spat with the Trump administration may actually help it, sales figures suggest

    17 June 2026
  • Hardware

    US investors will soon have access to SK Hynix, another memory maker driving the AI ​​boom

    7 July 2026

    Smart glasses maker Even Realities hits $1 billion valuation with $150 million in funding led by Meituan, Tencent

    6 July 2026

    5 office gadgets that can make your work day better

    6 July 2026

    IQM, Europe’s first public quantum company, admits that the future of the technology is uncertain

    3 July 2026

    Thiel Capital’s Jack Selby commits stakes in hot startups like Etched through Arizona connections

    3 July 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    New Google ad imagines a Declaration of Independence written with the help of artificial intelligence

    4 July 2026

    Cloudflare’s new policy pushes AI companies to pay for publishers’ content

    1 July 2026

    Watch out, Amazon: The Kobo eReader now has a Goodreads rival

    29 June 2026

    YouTube Shorts just got even shorter with an update that lets you double the playback speed

    25 June 2026

    Deezer says its new feature allows fans to remix songs with the artist’s consent

    24 June 2026
  • Security

    Canada’s spy agency says it hacked drug traffickers, extremists and a ransomware gang last year

    6 July 2026

    Politician who investigated abuses of wiretapping software on his phone with Pegasus spyware

    3 July 2026

    The US government says it’s been hacked — again

    2 July 2026

    In major privacy victory, Supreme Court rules that geo-trafficking warrants are protected by privacy rights

    29 June 2026

    The Klue hack results in a data breach at several cybersecurity companies

    26 June 2026
  • Startups

    Station F emerges as a launch pad for Europe’s hottest AI startups

    6 July 2026

    Your Brand Deserves Its Own Stage — TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 Side Events

    4 July 2026

    The browser wars aren’t about search anymore — here are the best alternatives to Chrome and Safari

    3 July 2026

    Last chance to apply — Startup Battlefield Australia applications close on 6 July

    3 July 2026

    Arcturus could halve grid electrical losses using nano-infused metals

    2 July 2026
  • Transportation

    Chevy built an all-American EV truck — why isn’t anyone buying it?

    3 July 2026

    Rivian raises EV sales forecast as second-quarter production ramps up

    3 July 2026

    Lucid Motors CFO steps down as new CEO continues leadership shakeup

    2 July 2026

    Tesla begins testing Cybercab without pedals or steering wheel in Austin

    2 July 2026

    Lime is starting life as a public company after years of uncertainty

    1 July 2026
  • Venture

    What are bending spoons? The little-known owner of AOL and Vimeo who is now public

    5 July 2026

    After $18B IPO, Bending Spoons Founder Says Success Comes From Minimizing Luck

    2 July 2026

    Bending Spoons defies SaaS slump, up 40% on first day of trading

    2 July 2026

    The DeepMind trio that created a poker AI is now making money for quantitative hedge funds

    1 July 2026

    Patronus AI lands $50 million to create ‘digital worlds’ that stress-test AI agents

    26 June 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»AI»This week in AI: Tackling racism in AI image generators
AI

This week in AI: Tackling racism in AI image generators

techtost.comBy techtost.com24 February 202408 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
This Week In Ai: Tackling Racism In Ai Image Generators
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Keeping up with an industry as fast-paced as artificial intelligence is a tall order. So, until an AI can do it for you, here’s a helpful roundup of recent stories in the world of machine learning, along with notable research and experiments we didn’t cover on our own.

This week in AI, Google halted the ability of its Gemini AI chatbot to create images of people after complaints from a section of users about historical inaccuracies. Claiming to depict “a Roman legion,” for example, Gemini would show an anachronistic, cartoonish group of racially diverse foot soldiers while rendering the “Zulu warriors” as Black.

It appears that Google – like some other AI vendors, including OpenAI – had clumsily hard-coded under the hood to try to “correct” for biases in their model. Responding to prompts such as “show me images of only women” or “show me images of only men,” Gemini would refuse, arguing that such images could “contribute to the exclusion and marginalization of other genders.” Geminis were also loathe to create images of people defined solely by their race – e.g. “white” or “black people” – out of an apparent concern for “reducing individuals to their physical characteristics.”

The right-wing has latched onto the bugs as evidence of an “awakening” agenda perpetuated by the tech elite. But you don’t need Occam’s Razor to see the less malicious truth: Google has been burned by its tools’ biases before (see classifying black men as gorillaswrong thermal weapons in the hands of Blacks as weaponsetc.), is so desperate to avoid history repeating itself that it manifests a less prejudiced world in its image-producing models — however flawed.

In her bestselling book “White Fragility,” anti-racist educator Robin DiAngelo writes about how erasing race—”colorblindness,” in another phrase—contributes to systemic racial power imbalances rather than mitigating or alleviating them. By claiming to “see no color” or reinforcing the notion that simply recognizing the struggle of people of other races is enough to call oneself “woke,” people perpetuate harm by avoiding any meaningful preservation of the subject, says DiAngelo.

Google’s ginger treatment of race-based prompts in Gemini didn’t avoid the problem, per se — but it disingenuously attempted to hide the model’s worst biases. One could argue (and many have) that these biases should not be ignored or ignored, but addressed in the larger context of the training data from which they emerge—that is, society on the world wide web.

Yes, the datasets used to train the image producers generally contain more whites than blacks, and yes, the images of Blacks in these datasets reinforce negative stereotypes. That’s why image generators sexually certain women of color, they depict white men in positions of power and general favor rich western prospects.

Some might argue that there is no profit for AI vendors. Whether they face – or choose not to face – the models’ biases, they will be criticized. And this is true. But I suppose that, in any case, these models lack explanation — packaged in a way that minimizes the ways in which their biases manifest.

If AI vendors would address the weaknesses of their models head on, with humble and transparent language, they would go much further than haphazard attempts to “fix” what is essentially unaddressed bias. We all have bias, the truth is — and as a result we don’t treat people the same. Neither do the models we manufacture. And we would do well to recognize that.

Here are some other notable AI stories from the past few days:

  • Women in Artificial Intelligence: TechCrunch has launched a series highlighting remarkable women in AI. Read the list here.
  • Stable Diffusion v3: Stability AI announced Stable Diffusion 3, the latest and most powerful version of the company’s image-building AI model, based on a new architecture.
  • Chrome gets GenAI: Google’s new Gemini-powered tool in Chrome lets users rewrite existing text on the web — or create something entirely new.
  • Blacker than ChatGPT: Advertising agency McKinney developed a quiz game, Are You Blacker than ChatGPT?, to shed light on AI bias.
  • Call for Laws: Hundreds of AI luminaries signed a public letter earlier this week calling for anti-deepfake legislation in the US
  • AI Matching: OpenAI has a new customer in Match Group, the owner of apps including Hinge, Tinder and Match, whose employees will use OpenAI’s AI technology to complete work-related tasks.
  • DeepMind Security: DeepMind, Google’s AI research arm, has created a new organization, AI Security and Alignment, made up of existing teams working on AI security, but also expanded to include new, specialized teams of researchers and engineers GenAI.
  • Open models: Just a week after releasing the latest iteration of the Gemini models, Google has released the Gemma, a new family of lightweight, open-weight models.
  • House Working Group: The US House of Representatives has established a task force on artificial intelligence that—as Devin writes—feels like a culmination after years of indecision that show no sign of ending.

More machine learning

AI models seem to know a lot, but what do they actually know? Well, the answer is nothing. But if you phrase the question slightly differently… they seem to have internalized some “meanings” that are similar to what humans know. Although no artificial intelligence really understands what a cat or a dog is, could it have some sense of similarity encoded in the embeddings of these two words that is different from, say, cat and bottle? Amazon researchers think so.

Their research compared the “trajectories” of similar but distinct sentences, such as “the dog barked at the burglar” and “the burglar made the dog bark,” with those of grammatically similar but different sentences, such as “a cat sleeps all day.” and “a girl jogs all afternoon.” They found that what people would find similar were indeed internally treated as more similar even though they were grammatically different, and vice versa for grammatically similar. Ok, I feel like this paragraph was a bit confusing, but suffice it to say that the concepts encoded in the LLMs seem more powerful and complex than expected, not completely naive.

Neural coding proves useful in artificial vision, Swiss researchers at EPFL have found out. Artificial retinas and other ways to replace parts of the human visual system generally have very limited resolution due to the limitations of microelectrode arrays. So, no matter how detailed the image is, it must be transmitted at very low fidelity. But there are different ways to downsample, and this team found that machine learning does a great job at it.

Image Credits: EPFL

“We found that if we applied a learning-based approach, we had improved results in terms of optimized sensory coding. But the most surprising thing was that when we used an unconstrained neural network, it learned to mimic aspects of retinal processing on its own,” said Diego Gezzi in a press release. It does perceptual compression, basically. They tested it on mouse retinas, so it’s not just theory.

An interesting application of computer vision by Stanford researchers hints at a mystery in how children develop their drawing skills. The team asked and analyzed 37,000 drawings from children of various objects and animals, and also (based on the children’s responses) how recognizable each drawing was. Interestingly, it wasn’t just the inclusion of signature features like a rabbit’s ears that made the designs more recognizable to other kids.

“The kinds of features that lead older children’s drawings to be recognizable do not appear to be determined by a single feature that all older children learn to include in their drawings. It’s something much more complex that these machine learning systems are picking up,” said lead researcher Judith Fan.

Chemists (also at EPFL) found that LLMs are also surprisingly good at helping with their work after minimal training. It is not just doing chemistry directly, but rather being perfected in a body of work that individual chemists cannot know all about. For example, in thousands of documents there may be a few hundred statements about whether a high-entropy alloy is single-phase or multi-phase (you don’t need to know what that means – they do). The system (based on GPT-3) can be trained on this type of questions and yes/no answers, and will soon be able to extrapolate from it.

Not a huge advance, just more evidence that LLMs are a useful tool in this sense. “The thing is, this is as easy as a literature search, which works for many chemical problems,” said researcher Berend Smit. “Looking for a foundational model can become a common way to start a project.”

Last, a word of caution from the Berkeley researchers, although now that I’m re-reading the post, I see that EPFL also addressed this. Go Lausanne! The team found that images found through Google were much more likely to enforce gender stereotypes about specific jobs and words than text that mentions the same thing. And there were also a lot more men in both cases.

Not only that, but in one experiment, they found that people who saw pictures instead of reading text when researching a role associated those roles with a gender more reliably, even days later. “It’s not just about the incidence of gender bias online,” said researcher Douglas Guilbeault. “Part of the story here is that there’s something very sticky, very powerful about representing images of people that text just doesn’t have.”

With things like Google’s image generation differentiation fracas going on, it’s easy to overlook the well-established and often verified fact that the data source for many AI models is severely biased, and that bias has a real effect on humans.

All included generators image newsletter racism Tackling this week in AI this week in the ai newsletter Week
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleArc Browser’s new AI-powered pinch-to-summary feature is clever, but often misses the mark
Next Article Reddit’s upcoming IPO could reward its power users
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

The ‘first’ ransomware attack run by AI still needed a human

7 July 2026

If you use Google, you train its AI. See how you can opt out.

6 July 2026

Amazon will stop accepting new customers for Mechanical Turk

6 July 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

The ‘first’ ransomware attack run by AI still needed a human

7 July 2026

You can now adjust the pace and expressiveness of Siri in the latest iOS 27 beta

7 July 2026

US investors will soon have access to SK Hynix, another memory maker driving the AI ​​boom

7 July 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

India’s payments chief believes artificial intelligence will play a big part in the next era of digital payments development

28 June 2026

Early Bird pricing ends tonight for the Founder Summit

26 June 2026

4 days left to save up to $190 on Founder Summit 2026

23 June 2026
Startups

Station F emerges as a launch pad for Europe’s hottest AI startups

Your Brand Deserves Its Own Stage — TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 Side Events

The browser wars aren’t about search anymore — here are the best alternatives to Chrome and Safari

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.