Current:Home > FinanceChild abuse images removed from AI image-generator training source, researchers say -Prosperity Pathways
Child abuse images removed from AI image-generator training source, researchers say
View
Date:2025-04-25 00:56:11
Artificial intelligence researchers said Friday they have deleted more than 2,000 web links to suspected child sexual abuse imagery from a database used to train popular AI image-generator tools.
The LAION research database is a huge index of online images and captions that’s been a source for leading AI image-makers such as Stable Diffusion and Midjourney.
But a report last year by the Stanford Internet Observatory found it contained links to sexually explicit images of children, contributing to the ease with which some AI tools have been able to produce photorealistic deepfakes that depict children.
That December report led LAION, which stands for the nonprofit Large-scale Artificial Intelligence Open Network, to immediately remove its dataset. Eight months later, LAION said in a blog post that it worked with the Stanford University watchdog group and anti-abuse organizations in Canada and the United Kingdom to fix the problem and release a cleaned-up database for future AI research.
Stanford researcher David Thiel, author of the December report, commended LAION for significant improvements but said the next step is to withdraw from distribution the “tainted models” that are still able to produce child abuse imagery.
One of the LAION-based tools that Stanford identified as the “most popular model for generating explicit imagery” — an older and lightly filtered version of Stable Diffusion — remained easily accessible until Thursday, when the New York-based company Runway ML removed it from the AI model repository Hugging Face. Runway said in a statement Friday it was a “planned deprecation of research models and code that have not been actively maintained.”
The cleaned-up version of the LAION database comes as governments around the world are taking a closer look at how some tech tools are being used to make or distribute illegal images of children.
San Francisco’s city attorney earlier this month filed a lawsuit seeking to shut down a group of websites that enable the creation of AI-generated nudes of women and girls. The alleged distribution of child sexual abuse images on the messaging app Telegram is part of what led French authorities to bring charges on Wednesday against the platform’s founder and CEO, Pavel Durov.
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Is the Paris Agreement Working?
- Gloomy global growth, Tupperware troubles, RIP HBO Max
- Kelsea Ballerini Speaks Out After Onstage Incident to Address Critics Calling Her Soft
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- The big reason why the U.S. is seeking the toughest-ever rules for vehicle emissions
- Activists Deplore the Human Toll and Environmental Devastation from Russia’s Unprovoked War of Aggression in Ukraine
- No, the IRS isn't calling you. It isn't texting or emailing you, either
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- The Fed's radical new bank band-aid
Ranking
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Al Jaffee, longtime 'Mad Magazine' cartoonist, dies at 102
- Warming Trends: British Morning Show Copies Fictional ‘Don’t Look Up’ Newscast, Pinterest Drops Climate Misinformation and Greta’s Latest Book Project
- A Climate-Driven Decline of Tiny Dryland Lichens Could Have Big Global Impacts
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Inside Clean Energy: In a Week of Sobering Climate News, Let’s Talk About Batteries
- How Greenhouse Gases Released by the Oil and Gas Industry Far Exceed What Regulators Think They Know
- In San Francisco’s Most Polluted Neighborhood, the Polluters Operate Without Proper Permits, Reports Say
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Banks are spooked and getting stingy about loans – and small businesses are suffering
The New US Climate Law Will Reduce Carbon Emissions and Make Electricity Less Expensive, Economists Say
Climate Envoy John Kerry Seeks Restart to US Emissions Talks With China
What to watch: O Jolie night
The job market is cooling as higher interest rates and a slowing economy take a toll
Hawaii's lawmakers mull imposing fees to pay for ecotourism crush
Ron DeSantis threatens Anheuser-Busch over Bud Light marketing campaign with Dylan Mulvaney