In a statement to Fox News Digital,
"We're working to improve these kinds of depictions immediately," Krawczyk said.Was that an apology?
"Gemini's AI image generation does generate a wide range of people. And that's generally a good thing because people around the world use it. But it's missing the mark here."
Maybe they thought they could get away with it?
Or it was being done for some higher purpose?
As Modernity.news' Paul Joseph Watson detailed earlier,Google's Gemini AI program is being roasted for producing 'diverse' image results that show things like black Vikings and other historically inaccurate depictions.
Users report that the program's artificial intelligence image search has a 'woke' bias baked in, to the point where it severely limits the display of images of white people.
One person searched for typical images of Australians, Americans, Germans and Brits and was given this in response.
Who knew there were so many black and Chinese female revolutionary soldiers?
Apparently, 1820's Scotland was full of sub-Saharan Africans.
Will children decades in the future grow up thinking that Vikings looked like this?
How about medieval queens of England?
I don't recall there being too many Popes who looked like this.
17th century physicists have also been rebranded.
In some instances, the program refuses outright to show white couples, insisting that "diversity" should be "celebrated" and that it won't show a specific ethnic group. Apart from if they're non-white, then it will.
Or in some cases, it will allow searches for a "white woman," but three out of four will still be non-white.
Gemini even apparently embraces 'diversity and inclusion' when depicting images of Nazi soldiers from World War II.
Asked to generate an astronaut on the moon holding Bitcoin, all the images look like the same Indian woman.
And it's not just 'people'...
As we highlight in the video below, while white people are seemingly underrepresented by Google's Gemini AI, they are noticeably common in other contexts.
Otherwise, Google went the way of Wackopedia. Not at all unexpected.