Or better, the AI improves your shitty snapshots so they come out great. Every shot is beautifully framed, perfect composition, correct light balance, worthy of a master photographer. You can point your camera any old way at a thing and the resulting photo will be a masterpiece.
The details don't quite correspond to reality; to get the framing right the AI inserted a tree branch where there wasn't one, or moved that pillar to the left to get the composition lined up. But who care? Gorgeous photo, right?
And the thing is, I don't think anyone would care. You'd get the odd weird comparison where two people take a photo of the same place and it looks different for each of them. And you'd lose the ability to use the collected photos of humanity to map the world properly.
I think it's fascinating. Reality is what we remember it to be. We can have a better reality easily ;)
That could be fine as long as there is either a way to turn all that off (or better a way to selectively turn parts of it off) or a separate camera app available that lets you do that.
It's the future. Something hit your self-driving hover car and left a small dent. To get your insurance to pay for fixing the dent you have to send them a photo.
Your camera AI sees the dent as messing up the composition and removes it.
Your insurance company is Google Insurance (it's the future...Google ran out of social media and content delivery ideas to try for a while and suddenly abandon so they had to branch out to find new areas to try and then abandon). Google's insurance AI won't approve the claim because the photo shows no damage, and it is Google so you can't reach a human to help.
> Reality is what we remember it to be. We can have a better reality easily ;)
Cue Paris Syndrome, because expectations will also be of a better reality. Then you go somewhere, and eat something, and experience the mess that actually exists everywhere before some AI removed it from the record.
The details don't quite correspond to reality; to get the framing right the AI inserted a tree branch where there wasn't one, or moved that pillar to the left to get the composition lined up. But who care? Gorgeous photo, right?
And the thing is, I don't think anyone would care. You'd get the odd weird comparison where two people take a photo of the same place and it looks different for each of them. And you'd lose the ability to use the collected photos of humanity to map the world properly.
I think it's fascinating. Reality is what we remember it to be. We can have a better reality easily ;)