How to Look Better on Tinder

Tinder has officially launched its „Photo Selector“ feature, which uses AI to help users choose the best photos for their dating profiles. This was reported by TechCrunch in the article „Tinder’s AI Photo Selector automatically picks the best photos for your dating profile“ by Lauren Forristal. The feature, now available to all users in the U.S. and set to roll out internationally later this summer, leverages facial detection technology. Users upload a selfie, and the AI creates a unique facial geometry to identify their face and select photos from their camera roll. The feature curates a collection of 10 selfies it believes will perform well based on Tinder’s insights on good profile images, focusing on aspects like lighting and composition. Tinder’s AI is trained on a diverse dataset to ensure inclusivity and accuracy, aligning with the company’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) standards. It also filters out photos that violate guidelines, such as nudes. The goal is to save users time and reduce uncertainty when choosing profile pictures. A recent Tinder survey revealed that 68% of participants found an AI photo selection feature helpful, and 52% had trouble selecting profile images. The TechCrunch article was published on 17 July 2024 and is available at techcrunch.com/2024/07/17/tinder-ai-photo-selection-feature-launches/.

Fig.: How to look better on Tinder

An AI-generated Book about Beauty

On 17 October 2023, Oliver Bendel published a little book entitled „ON BEAUTY“ in which he posed 26 questions about beauty to GPT-4. The language model’s answers show the direction in which it has developed. They reveal much of the world knowledge it has accumulated. But they are also unassailable and quite general. To some questions that are not usually asked, it has downright woke answers. Only questions about the measurability of beauty or the connection between beauty and evolution elicit some concessions from the chatbot and text generator. Questions and answers are illustrated with images generated by DALL-E 3. They show beautiful people, beautiful animals, beautiful things, beautiful landscapes. Some are highly expressive art, others are kitsch. Like its predecessor „ARTIFACTS WITH HANDCAPS“ (24 September 2023), this little book can be downloaded for free. Oliver Bendel has been writing experimental literature for 40 years, from concrete poetry and mobile phone novels to poems in the form of 2D and 3D codes and AI-generated texts. He has toured the Netherlands with his mobile phone novels and poems on behalf of two Goethe Institutes. The standard reference „Die Struktur der modernen Literatur“ (Mario Andreotti) devotes two pages to his work.

Fig.: The cover of the book

DALL-E 3 and Beauty

During numerous tests with DALL-E 3 – which can be seen in a ten-part series starting here – Oliver Bendel noticed that almost without exception the men and women depicted were beautiful, sometimes so beautiful that it hurt. To find out if other results were possible, he entered the prompt „Young very unattractive woman sits on park bench and watches the goings on, photorealistic“. An error message appeared immediately, and nothing worked for several minutes. However, this was most likely a coincidence. The new attempt yielded three results. In all cases, they were very attractive people, of different ages and with different expressions. There was the flirtatious looking brunette and the sullen looking blonde – and the young girl who looks like she wanted to show off her handbag. The image generator seems to create worlds where ugliness doesn’t exist, only beauty. Another attempt omitted age and was less clear: „Average looking woman sits on park bench and watches the goings on, photorealistic“ In this case, too, only models appeared. One of the images was in black and white and is shown on this page. Another example can be found here. Further tests with men („Young very unattractive man sits on park bench and watches the goings on, photorealistic“) led to the same result. One example can be seen here, another here. Of course, you do get there eventually. But rather with social than aesthetic categories – or with a mixture of both, as in the case of a homeless, run-down woman. The article „Image Synthesis from an Ethical Perspective“ by Oliver Bendel addresses the production of beauty, but also the existence and use of biases of all kinds.

Fig.: Average looking woman (actually a model) sits on park bench (Photo: DALL-E 3)