The new set of tools includes viewing an image’s history, metadata, and context users used it with on different sites.
Google announced these “About this image” features earlier this year, and now it is making it available to all English language speakers globally.
The tool also lets users understand how people described the image on other sites to help debunk any false claims.
In October, Adobe, along with companies like Microsoft, Nikon, and Leica, released a symbol to clearly mark AI-generated images.
Google also announced today that approved journalists and fact-checkers will be able to upload or copy URLs of images to learn more about them within their own tools with FaceCheck Claim Search API.
What’s more, the company is experimenting with generative AI to help with the description of sources such as a page of an unfamiliar seller or an unknown blog.
The original article contains 433 words, the summary contains 143 words. Saved 67%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The new set of tools includes viewing an image’s history, metadata, and context users used it with on different sites.
Google announced these “About this image” features earlier this year, and now it is making it available to all English language speakers globally.
The tool also lets users understand how people described the image on other sites to help debunk any false claims.
In October, Adobe, along with companies like Microsoft, Nikon, and Leica, released a symbol to clearly mark AI-generated images.
Google also announced today that approved journalists and fact-checkers will be able to upload or copy URLs of images to learn more about them within their own tools with FaceCheck Claim Search API.
What’s more, the company is experimenting with generative AI to help with the description of sources such as a page of an unfamiliar seller or an unknown blog.
The original article contains 433 words, the summary contains 143 words. Saved 67%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!