Machine Generated Data
Tags
Color Analysis
Face analysis
Amazon
Microsoft

AWS Rekognition
Age | 17-27 |
Gender | Female, 97.6% |
Happy | 2.9% |
Confused | 6.9% |
Angry | 7.8% |
Disgusted | 3.6% |
Sad | 8.3% |
Calm | 67.6% |
Surprised | 2.8% |
Feature analysis
Amazon

Person | 90.6% | |
Categories
Imagga
paintings art | 99.6% | |
interior objects | 0.1% | |
pets animals | 0.1% | |
text visuals | 0.1% | |
nature landscape | 0.1% | |
streetview architecture | 0.1% | |
Captions
Microsoft
created on 2018-03-23
a graffiti covered wall | 75.2% | |
a painting of a graffiti covered wall | 63.8% | |
an old photo of a graffiti covered wall | 63.7% | |
Anthropic Claude
Created by claude-3-haiku-20240307 on 2024-12-30
The image appears to be a black and white photograph of a wall covered in torn and weathered posters. The posters contain text in what appears to be Japanese characters, as well as some grainy images of a person, possibly a woman. The overall scene has a gritty, urban feel, with the damaged and layered posters creating an abstract, textured composition.
Created by claude-3-opus-20240229 on 2024-12-30
The black and white image shows a weathered poster or flyer affixed to a wooden utility pole or wall. The poster features a picture of an East Asian woman peeking out from behind torn and tattered layers of paper. The poster is covered in Japanese or Chinese characters, some of which are partially obscured by the damage to the paper. The overall composition has an aged, gritty, urban feel, capturing a slice of street life and the ephemeral nature of public notices and advertisements that accumulate over time in busy cities.
Created by claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022 on 2024-12-30
This is a black and white photograph showing a torn and weathered poster or advertisement on what appears to be a wall or pole in Japan. The poster contains Japanese text and characters, with some visible kanji and katakana writing. The image appears to be from an older time period, potentially mid-20th century, given its worn appearance and photographic style. Through the torn pieces, there's a photograph visible that seems to be part of the original poster. The overall composition creates an interesting layered effect with the torn paper and text elements, giving it a somewhat documentary or street photography feel.