Hi!

While I really enjoy seeing many of my fellow man being accommodating to people with disabilities. I find manually transcribing every image I post to be very tiring.

I thought that I could at least use some sort of AI to help with image transcripts, tho, that could probably be better used by the actual person with the disability.

So thats the question, should I skip the transcribing of an image or let an AI do it?

  • Auster@thebrainbin.org
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    12 hours ago

    Imo it’s a good use. But do make sure you read the outputs throughly. Even hand-made OCR tools can go crazy some times. Also if the AI can be fully offline / self-hosted, that’s even better imo.

  • forestbeasts@pawb.social
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    14 hours ago

    Do not.

    Please just don’t.

    People (hi I’m people) need what the image IS, what’s important about it, why you included it. Not just what some slop generator shat out about it.

    Better to have nothing, which is at least honest, than to have something that PURPORTS to have meaning but then just, doesn’t.

    – Frost

  • Kierunkowy74@piefed.zip
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    22 hours ago

    Check your output as it may be less accurate than your effort.

    AI is able to extensively describe a photo, like these published on !pics@lemmy.world , but fails at seeing, what part of it is actually important, or recognising a point of a meme. It will save you many keystrokes, but probably will still need to be manually corrected.

  • Rimu@piefed.social
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    19 hours ago

    If I were blind I’d prefer it if the app just hid all image posts from me. The alt text, when it exists, is going to be trash most of the time anyway.

  • Lumidaub@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    If you can get an AI to produce an actually useful description, that would be extremely interesting. However, AIs don’t know what’s important about an image and will fill up the description with useless information, effectively spam for the person that needs a description.

    Write just a sentence, describe the thing that is important, while keeping in mind why you’re even posting the image, and it’s going to take less time than asking the AI.

      • Lumidaub@feddit.org
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        1 day ago

        True and one sentence written by a human who understands the image is better than twenty sentences by a word prediction machine.

        • HappyFrog@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          No matter how good human written descriptions are, people just won’t do them. So having a automated system is much more preferable.

          • Lumidaub@feddit.org
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            1 day ago

            I know what you’re saying but I truly think for most people it’s simply that they’re overthinking it. They think every single thing needs to be in the description, with references explained and sourced and whatnot. That does sound exhausting. And I have written a handful of descriptions like that for pictures where I thought the details were interesting enough to justify the effort. But really, a simple “The thirteenth Doctor and Rose Tyler embracing and deeply kissing” is already very sufficient in most cases (add “standing on an asteroid in front of a field of glittering stars - digital colour painting” if you have the spoons). So imho it’s better to educate them and encourage short, concise descriptions than to give in to the slop.

        • x74sys@programming.devB
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          1 day ago

          Yeah, apart from the fact that I imagine that people who need alt text don’t appreciate LLM output. It‘s very boring. It’s either extremely technical and ice-cold or so cringe that you have to stop reading. Just what I think.

          At least for me, if I realize that I’m reading an AI blog article or AI generated text in some other form, I don’t read it.

  • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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    1 day ago

    I’d ask someone who needs these transcriptions first. I tend more towards “Nay”. I mean if they want AI transcriptions, I guess they could just run their own AI. And that way they get to choose between human and AI ones. I’m kind of against flooding the internet with AI content as long as the recipients can do it themselves.

    • Lumidaub@feddit.org
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      1 day ago

      That’s a good point but wouldn’t it be preferable to have one AI run one time instead of several of them doing the work again and again?

      (Assuming that we’re even okay with AI generated descriptions in the first place which I’m not for reasons I’ve laid out in my other comments but I’m talking hypothetically)

      • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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        21 hours ago

        Really hard to tell. I mean there are situations in which people think they’re doing someone a favour. But they’re really not. Upside of doing it individually is: affected people get to pick the model they like best. And they can prompt it however they like. Depends a bit on your expertise on the matter if your pre-generated stuff is on the same level or more a disservice. Upside of pre-generating it once is: maybe a bit less CO2 in the atmosphere and a few less trees killed. But that certainly depends on how many people read those descriptions. If there’s just 2 people with screenreaders out there, who don’t even click on all the images, you might very well be wasting compute. And have a negative balance on the environment.

      • MeldrikA
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        1 day ago

        Alternatively, it’s built into the platform. So when someone uploads an image to Lemmy a local AI model does the description.

        Edit: Then it could even be marked as AI generated and people could choose to be exposed to it or not.

  • placebo@lemmy.zip
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    1 day ago

    AI is great for this. We shouldn’t put people with disabilities at a disadvantage because of the anti-AI hysteria.

  • originalucifer@moist.catsweat.com
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    1 day ago

    personally, this is the kind of laser focused tooling its good for. LLMs are going to be critical to assisting the disabled in many contexts.

  • x74sys@programming.devB
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    1 day ago

    In my opinion, no. It has to be heavily curated. You’re not saving yourself a lot of work if you have to read it word by word (and probably correct stuff) anyway.

    I think just one very short sentence describing what’s on there (it doesn’t have to be detailed) is a lot better than whatever an LLM will give you.

  • vala@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    23 hours ago

    You have a unique advantage in using AI for this over a vision impaired person. That being that if the generated text is wrong, you know and can correct it.

  • FaceDeer@fedia.io
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    1 day ago

    Give it a test and see how accurate it is, if it’s good enough then go ahead. People have been using AI-based OCR for literal decades already, nothing has fundamentally changed. There’s just a sudden moral panic about it lately.

  • Petersson@feddit.org
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    1 day ago

    Personally “AI” is a slur for profit-driven generative bs. The concept it’s based on is great. I love pattern recognition and all the possible usecases for Machine Learning when it comes to science, material research, …

    tl;dr: Go for it.

  • Doorknob@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    By transcribing, do you mean describing what is in a picture, or transcribing text in a picture?

    For the former, I can’t really imagine an image you couldn’t describe for accessibility within a sentence, and for the latter, OCR could do the job equally well.

    I’m not saying this to just push the view that neural networks are no good for anything btw. For translation, for example, or text to speech/speech to text, I genuinely think they’re a revelation, and they need very little compute to perform those functions.

  • rako@tarte.nuage-libre.fr
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    1 day ago

    Using AI for

    no

    I find it tiring

    The problem with disabled people isn’t the disability, it’s the behaviour of non-disabled people putting them under, willingly or not. You being tired of that ir actively putting them under. Yes, it’s tiring to take care of people, it’s work. There’s no goind around that. Treating people as equals requires taking care of them, and until you take that as normal (just like brushing your teeth or doind the laundry or sweeping the floor at your place is work, but you still do it) you will be belittling them.

    The change needs to happen on your side, on your conception of humanity and society. AI is not going to help you

    • Deebster@infosec.pub
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      12 hours ago

      I read this disgraceful comment yesterday, and I’ve dug through my history to reply to it today.

      @rako, this unacceptable. Let’s remove the mention of AI to see if you can get some perspective… Imagine this exchange:

      P1: I’ve been cooking for the homeless but it’s taking up a lot of my time and energy. Is it ok to use shop-bought meals?

      P2: You being weary of cooking is belittling the homeless! People like you are what’s wrong with society.

      I hope you can agree that this is unfair, and unhinged. It’s also not mischaracterising what you wrote.

      @Gonzako you don’t seem to have minded rako trying to shame you, but they were way out of line.

      • rako@tarte.nuage-libre.fr
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        11 hours ago

        I’m sorry but you are just showing you don’t know what AI is about. AI isn’t a shop-bought meal. It’s paying a white supremacist who pinky-promises you he’ll feed people you just have to give him money. The white supremacist chooses what he wants to do with the money: maybe he’ll feed people because they’re white, maybe he’ll beat people because they’re black, but one thing is for sure: he will always work for his own benefit. Not for others, not for you, and certainly not for disabled people.

        The correct comparison with AI is not, as many people say, a neutral tool. AI is a political project aiming at domination of a large part of the population. The apt comparison is slavery. Yes, it can be very useful ! It’s free workforce, you don’t need to argue with it, concede anything, and things just get done. Slavery is fine if you’re part of the dominating part of the population, just like AI is fine if you’re part of the dominating part of population. If you’re on the other side you will always be exploited, dehumanized, tortured (yes, subjecting people to constan horrors in the name of “training” is torture)

        Let’s redo your analogy now:

        I’ve been cooking for the homeless but I’m getting tired. Is it ok to ask slaves to cook meals for me so I can give the meals to homeless ?

        Slavery, and AI, isn’t going to help the homeless or the disabled. Destroying the earth, appropriating others’ art and work and knowledge for personal profit is not helping, it’s actively hurting.

        What is at stake here, really, is your own appreciation of the goods vs the bads of AI. If the literal anti-democratic project is acceptable because it makes you feel like a good person (“I’m helping people !”) then there is a big work to be done to unravel that. When your personal opinion of yourself is more important than the actual good you might do, something is wrong.

    • Gonzako@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 day ago

      Yeah, but you can’t preemptively take care of everyone. For example, satisfactorys arachnophobia mode wouldnt exist if it wasnt for the fact that one of the devs couldn’t work on it otherwise.

      Time and effort are a limited resource.

      • rako@tarte.nuage-libre.fr
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        1 day ago

        There is a huge difference between not taking care because it’s not important to you, and not taking care because you can’t. It’s a cop out to mix up both.

        It’s completely ok to acknowledge that you can’t do it, and to ask around for others to relay you. That’s society at work doing good things for all of us, and that’s how we get out of all this mess. It’s perfectly fine !