I got the exact same interpretation of the article and really dislike what they wrote.
They start off by trumpeting their wondrous AI image enhancement technology. They make just a passing reference to the deliberately blurred moon image without explaining how their enhancement technology is wholly inappropriate for "enhancing" an image with no detail to begin with. They continue bragging about AI, object recognition, image stabilization, multi-frame super-resolution and denoising - without addressing the elephant in the room, which is replacing blurry objects with pre-loaded stock imagery. It keeps reiterating that what it's doing is "detail enhancement" (I counted 8 times), not "pasting a stock photo".
What an utterly disingenuous press release. It's nothing but a red herring meant to distract and divert.
> Samsung continues to improve Scene Optimizer to reduce any potential confusion that may occur between the act of taking a picture of the real moon and an image of the moon.
So... they end with a line that basically says "we aim to lie more selectively"?
They start off by trumpeting their wondrous AI image enhancement technology. They make just a passing reference to the deliberately blurred moon image without explaining how their enhancement technology is wholly inappropriate for "enhancing" an image with no detail to begin with. They continue bragging about AI, object recognition, image stabilization, multi-frame super-resolution and denoising - without addressing the elephant in the room, which is replacing blurry objects with pre-loaded stock imagery. It keeps reiterating that what it's doing is "detail enhancement" (I counted 8 times), not "pasting a stock photo".
What an utterly disingenuous press release. It's nothing but a red herring meant to distract and divert.
> Samsung continues to improve Scene Optimizer to reduce any potential confusion that may occur between the act of taking a picture of the real moon and an image of the moon.
So... they end with a line that basically says "we aim to lie more selectively"?