FB definitely OCRs any image meme that I submit and looks for key words. If it finds any, it puts up the relevant warning flag to discourage or even prevent posting. So I have two strategies:-
If I put up an image meme with text, I smudge the key words so the OCR doesn't work but the human eye can figure it out. Or I use a typeface that OCR can't recognise. Or I use a word with similar meaning that won't trigger the A.I.
If I type actual text, I replace characters such as "i" and "a" and "v" and "o" and "u" with equivalent Greek characters. This makes the text unintelligible to A.I. but it remains perfectly readable to a human. Example:
Normal: The antivirus vaccination is dangerous.
With Greek: The αntινιrυs ναccιnαtιοn ιs dαngerουs.
(To get a "v" in Greek type "n".)
Misspelling might also work. Be inventive. For "vaccination" try "faksee nayshun" or similar.
What is is?
FB definitely OCRs any image meme that I submit and looks for key words. If it finds any, it puts up the relevant warning flag to discourage or even prevent posting. So I have two strategies:-
If I put up an image meme with text, I smudge the key words so the OCR doesn't work but the human eye can figure it out. Or I use a typeface that OCR can't recognise. Or I use a word with similar meaning that won't trigger the A.I.
If I type actual text, I replace characters such as "i" and "a" and "v" and "o" and "u" with equivalent Greek characters. This makes the text unintelligible to A.I. but it remains perfectly readable to a human. Example:
Normal: The antivirus vaccination is dangerous.
With Greek: The αntινιrυs ναccιnαtιοn ιs dαngerουs.
(To get a "v" in Greek type "n".)
Misspelling might also work. Be inventive. For "vaccination" try "faksee nayshun" or similar.