• conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    It’s not racist to understand physics.

    It’s exactly the same reason phone cameras do terrible in low light unless they do obscenely long exposures (which can’t resolve detail in anything moving). The information is not captured at sufficient resolution.

    • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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      3 months ago

      Rhetorical question (because we clearly can infer the answer) but… have you ever seen a black person?

      A bit of melanin does not make you into some giant void that breaks all cameras. Black folk aren’t doing long exposure shots for selfies or group photos. Believe it or not but RDCWorld doesn’t need to use nightvision cameras to film a skit.

      • conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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        3 months ago

        You can keep hand waving away the statement of fact that lower precision input is lower precision input.

        And yes, for actual photography (where people are deliberately still for long enough to offset the longer exposure required), you do actually need different lighting and different camera settings to get the same quality results. But real cameras are also capable of capturing far more dynamic range without guessing heavily on postprocessing.

        • xor@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          3 months ago

          And you can keep hand waving away the fact that lower precision because of less light is not the primary cause of racial bias in facial recognition systems - it’s the fact that the datasets used for training are racially biased.

          • conciselyverbose@sh.itjust.works
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            3 months ago

            Yes, it is. The idea that giant corporations “aren’t trying” is laughable, and it’s a literal guarantee that massively lower quality, noisier inputs will result in a lower quality model with lower quality outputs.

            Less photons hitting the sensors matters. A lot.