Photo Professionals on AI
Photographer
Photojournalist and Documentary photographer
Associate Professor
School of Journalism
University of Texas at Austin
Photo & Video Artist
Berlin
Non-fiction photographer
Bogotá, Colombia
Documentary photographer
Reva & David Logan Professor of Photojournalism
UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism
Artist/Visual & Literary Educator
Detroit Police Homicide Detective (Ret.)
Detroit, MI, USA
Documentarian/Visual Journalist
Richmond, VA, USA
Essay by Brian Palmer
Indigenous Futurist
Visual Storyteller
Documentarian/Photojournalist
Brooklyn, NY, USA
Magnum Photos
Artist/Documentary Photographer
Iran
Member, Magnum Photos
Photographer, Musician.
Director
Paradox
Edam – NL
Testimonials
A camera is an ethical tool which helps guarantee credibility because the photographer is an observer. AI images are just numbers in a box that have no conscience and no morality. But they look like a photographer “took them”. Synthetic images are not any more real than fiction is fact.
Larry Towell - Photographer, Poet, and Oral Historian
I use the language of images, along with that of words, to document the world I’ve had the privilege to enter and participate in through my questions, my observations and my camera. As an honest photojournalist, I don’t extrapolate or lie with words, and I don’t do that with images, either.
Jane Evelyn Atwood - Documentary Photographer
Today, artificial intelligence has given us the possibility to synthetise ‘photographic truth’ relying on (post) photographic data stretching out from images formerly known as ‘straight’ to ‘improved’ and now also – and increasingly – synthetic. All stored in the ‘cloud’, pretending to be collective memory while in reality shaped by commercially operated algorithms: systems locked up in black boxes virtually no one has access to.
Bas Vroege - Director - Paradox
As a documentary photographer who lives in a country where the truth is a battlefield I fear that manipulation of everything will become so much more easier with AI that we won’t be able to hold those in power accountable for their actions.
Newsha Tavakolian - Artist/Documentary Photographer
As documentary image makers and as humans, we feel emotions. This is crucial for our images to transcend the algorithms. Artificial intelligence is far away from feeling.
Josué Rivas - Indigenous Futurist
No one should be able to to tell the story of who you are better than you. I believe that one of the downfalls of AI is its ability to further hijack and/or silence the voices of marginalized individuals whose stories have historically been told for them instead of by them.
Khary Mason - Artist/Visual & Literary Educator
This new and dangerous world of digital distortion and AI will crush our powerful witness in documentary photography and the truth that so many of us have strived to observe through our photographs.
Ken Light - Documentary Photographer
Still and moving images purporting to be photographic or camera-led eyewitness proof of actual unfolding news events or of non-fiction documentary issues-—whether deployed in newspapers, on TV stations, or on social media—must remain contextualized and easily distinguishable from images which are fabricated by AI.
Donna DeCesare - Photojournalist and Documentary Photographer
In order to safeguard the long-term credibility of the photographic record there needs to be a robust industry-wide set of standards.
Stephen Ferry - Non-fiction Photographer
Our mission as photojournalists is to show the world as we experience it and see it. We strive to honestly represent the people we meet and the places we visit in our photos. Artificial intelligence cannot do this.
Joseph Rodriguez - Documentarian/Photojournalist
I became a photojournalist because I believed that photos and moving images I saw in newspapers and on TV stations showed me the world as I had not seen it. I continue to make what we once called “straight photos”—no edits or changes of images that added, removed, or distorted content in the frame— because I believe in their value and their power.
Brian Palmer - Documentarian/Visual Journalist