And it is a small step from those automated features to a phone's filter that removes acne in portrait mode. And one more small step from there to snapchat filters that make your eyes look bigger. And once you're in snapchat there other filters that superimpose your features on a dragon's face. At that point I don't think anyone would argue that it's a real picture of someone's face. I don't think anyone would argue that it's photography. We crossed a line somewhere but where was the line? If the dragon isn't real then neither is the augmented-eye image. And if that isn't real then neither is the acne-removed image. And so on down the line if you work through the issue in reverse; still the line is not obvious. It gets philosophical; what is photography? Surely this has all been thought through and the line drawn by the governing body of the competition? I find it hard to believe that this guy managed to win with an AI generated image, without breaking the rules of the competition.Even modest cameras these days have automation features (e.g. red-eye reduction, contrast adjustment) which could be regarded as AI. Perhaps photos taken with those should be disallowed in competitions?


