Meta's AI image generator can't seem to grasp the idea that interracial couples exist

  • Meta's AI image-generation tool is struggling to create images of interracial couples.

  • Meta launched the standalone image tool, Imagine with Meta, late last year.

  • AI image generators have previously struggled to accurately depict people of different races.

Meta's AI image-generation tool is struggling to understand the concept of interracial couples.

The tool failed to correctly generate a Black man with a white wife when prompted by Business Insider. Instead, delivering images of a Black couple.

The same happened when BI asked it to produce an image of an Asian man with a white wife — only pictures of Asian couples were shown. However, the generator was able to successfully depict an interracial couple with a Black woman and a white husband.

AI-generated photo of interracial couple
Meta's Imagine tool was able to generate pictures of a Black woman and white man embracing.Meta Imagine

Meta launched the standalone AI-powered image generator — Imagine with Meta — late last year. The tool is free to use and similar to OpenAI's DALL-E, Midjourney, and Stable Diffusion.

The Verge first reported the issue on Wednesday, with reporter Mia Sato claiming she "tried dozens of times" to create images of Asian men and women with white partners and friends. Sato said the image generator was only able to return one accurate image of the races specified in her prompts.

Representatives for Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment from BI, made outside normal working hours.

AI image generators have struggled to accurately present people of different races in the past.

Google's Gemini image generator provoked a firestorm of backlash after users found it was creating historically inaccurate images. Google paused the Gemini's image-generating capacity after users accused it of being overly "woke."

High-profile figures, including Elon Musk, used the incident as an example of what they saw as Google's leftwing culture and employees.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai later said the company got it wrong on Gemini and that the flagship AI system had "offended our users and shown bias."

Read the original article on Business Insider