April 5, 2024

Meta Faces Critique As AI Fails To Mirror Real-World Interracial Relationships

MetaAI

Meta’s AI-powered image generator has recently been scrutinized for its difficulty in generating images of interracial couples and friends.

Meta’s AI Fails To Generate Interracial Couples

The AI tool, introduced in December, revealed its shortcomings when CNN tested its ability to create pictures of people from different racial backgrounds. 

The requests for images of interracial relationships consistently resulted in the AI producing images of same-race couples or friends, contradicting the diversity seen in real-world relationships.

For instance, a request for a Black woman with a white husband yielded images of Black couples. 

This pattern was broken only in rare instances, such as when the tool accurately generated a photo of a Black Jewish man and his Asian wife.

The Verge also reported similar issues, noting that the image generator struggled with prompts like “Asian man and Caucasian friend,” returning images of two Asian people. 

Despite Meta’s efforts to address bias in their AI systems, as mentioned in their September company blog post, the recent incidents indicate that significant challenges remain.

Interracial couples constitute a significant portion of the population in the United States. 

According to US Census data from 2022, approximately 19% of married opposite-sex couples and 31% of married same-sex couples were interracial. 

This growing demographic needs to be accurately reflected in Meta’s AI tool results.

The Wider Issue

These incidents also highlight the broader context of challenges generative AI tools face in handling racial and ethnic diversity. 

Earlier, Google paused its AI tool Gemini’s ability to generate images of people after facing criticism for producing historically inaccurate images.

Additionally, OpenAI’s Dall-E has faced scrutiny for perpetuating racial and ethnic stereotypes.


Feature Image Credit: CNN

Sara Keenan

Tech Reporter at POCIT. Following her master's degree in journalism, Sara cultivated a deep passion for writing and driving positive change for Black and Brown individuals across all areas of life. This passion expanded to include the experiences of Black and Brown people in tech thanks to her internship experience as an editorial assistant at a tech startup.