We do not currently earn money from 99% of the brands listed on the website since the focus is still on the quality of the results rather than optimizing the margins. But yes many brands have affiliate networks that you can join and if a user clicks on a brand we partnered with and buys the product, we could earn a commission.
Thanks for asking about market applications. Currently, this tech works best for marketing materials and social ads where rapid content generation is prioritized over perfect details. For e-commerce main product images that directly affect sales, we still recommend professional photo shoots with proper lighting and detailed post-processing, as these require higher precision and authenticity.
Thank you for your thoughtful questions. I’d be happy to provide some details:
1. Model Training and Evaluation: Yes, we do train our own models, including specialized ones like AI model try-on and fashion image-to-video conversion. Additionally, we fine-tune certain models, such as hand-repair. To determine whether our models are improving, we employ a case-by-case evaluation approach. This involves manually reviewing and comparing outputs to ensure that each new iteration effectively addresses the issues found in previous versions. This meticulous process helps us maintain high-quality performance and continuously enhance our models.
2. AI Fashion Model and Virtual Try-On: AI Fashion Model allows to take an image of someone wearing a particular outfit and transfer that outfit onto a different model using AI. The quality of the initial image plays a significant role in the final result. High-resolution, well-lit images lead to more accurate and realistic outfit transfers. Our technology leverages powerful feature embeddings to control the generation process, ensuring that the transferred clothing fits naturally on any individual.
Thanks for pointing this out. Those categories were included for SEO testing purposes only. We'll review and adjust our showcase examples to better reflect our professional focus on general e-commerce fashion photography
Or put better, people need to adapt to the notion that most movement in public spaces is observed by a multitude of networked devices; most of which are not under your control.
Most cars have some sort of mobile connectivity, contain at least one passenger with an active mobile phone (also GPS equipped). Cars are probably one of the more easy to track and monitor things in public spaces.
And of course, many cars on the road are also equipped with cameras that are perfectly capable of capturing things like license plates of cars around them, which are of course designed to keep track of cars. Not to mention countless cameras monitoring traffic, speed limits, etc.
Most privacy protection is going to have to come from laws and legislation on how to access and use tracking data. That does still exist. But it's under a lot of pressure. There's so much tech out there that avoiding being tracked is only getting harder. Tin foil hats are not quite good enough at this point.
Are you eliciting or was that just a bad choice of words?
In many languages, "if you (A) adapt to something (B)", A changes (and possibly largely tolerates) and B does not. "If you (A) adapt something (B)", B changes after your action, A does not.
I suspect GP is being downvoted because of their choise of words. As someone who also doesn't speak English as a first language I think "people need to adapt" can also be understood in a positive manner. GP seems to suggest we need laws and legislation to fix this issue, and that would lead me to assume that they mean it in the same sense as "resist". In my language I think the literal translation of how we would prhase it might also be "adapt".