Yes, and some tests were done using twitter, fb and even tineye (tineye is actually the strongest one it seems).
The original method was to cover the corners and shrink the image, after some testing what was determined was that one could apply a filter over the image, as long as it covers 25% of the "features" (a jargon term) with an alpha of 6% or more (alpha is transparency where 0 = invisible and 1 = opaque). Then reuploading the image will show that it is a unique image.
Others have made scripts that can run through memes and apply that overlay to camouflage memes. It does work, and would require manually removing because the AI would recognize it as completely separate from the banned image.
Yes, and some tests were done using twitter, fb and even tineye (tineye is actually the strongest one it seems).
The original method was to cover the corners and shrink the image, after some testing what was determined was that one could apply a filter over the image, as long as it covers 25% of the "features" (a jargon term) with an alpha of 6% or more (alpha is transparency where 0 = invisible and 1 = opaque). Then reuploading the image will show that it is a unique image.
Others have made scripts that can run through memes and apply that overlay to camouflage memes. It does work, and would require manually removing because the AI would recognize it as completely separate from the banned image.