Machine Generated Data
Tags
Amazon
created on 2022-02-19
Clarifai
created on 2023-10-29
form | 99.6 | |
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template | 99.1 | |
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presentation | 98.6 | |
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page | 98.4 | |
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layout | 98 | |
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label | 96.9 | |
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number | 96.3 | |
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variant | 95.7 | |
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navigation | 95.6 | |
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booklet | 95.3 | |
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steps | 95.1 | |
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stripe | 94.5 | |
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restaurant check | 94.2 | |
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option (finance) | 93.2 | |
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banner | 92.1 | |
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annual | 91.9 | |
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time | 90.6 | |
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information | 90.5 | |
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daily occurence | 88.8 | |
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calendar | 88.2 | |
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Imagga
created on 2022-02-19
Google
created on 2022-02-19
Microsoft
created on 2022-02-19
text | 100 | |
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handwriting | 86.5 | |
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design | 81.6 | |
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menu | 53.3 | |
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screenshot | 34.7 | |
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receipt | 18.4 | |
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Color Analysis
Feature analysis
Amazon

Menu | 79.4% | |
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Categories
Imagga
text visuals | 100% | |
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Captions
Microsoft
created by unknown on 2022-02-19
text | 50.5% | |
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OpenAI GPT
Created by gpt-4o-2024-05-13 on 2025-01-27
The image appears to be a poster created by the Guerrilla Girls, feminist activist artists known for addressing gender and racial inequality within the art world and other cultural arenas. The poster focuses on gender disparities in the film industry, presented in a series of four quadrants that include text and illustrations.
Upper Left Quadrant:
- Title: "THE SUNDANCE CLASS OF 1996: WHERE ARE THEY FIVE YEARS LATER?"
- Contains a bar graph comparing the number of male and female directors in 1996 to those in 2000, illustrating a stark disparity favoring male directors.
- Text bubble with a sarcastic comment: "Hey, I'm just glad I got the part. You expect me to complain about the wardrobe????"
- The section indicates the lack of progress for female directors over the five-year period.
Upper Right Quadrant:
- Title: "THE U.S. SENATE is more progressive than Hollywood."
- Comparison statistics showing 14% of U.S. Senators are female vs only 4% female directors in Hollywood.
- Lists of film distributors who, in 2000, either released zero or only one film directed by a woman: Fine Line, Dimension, USA Films, Artisan, Shooting Gallery, Miramax, New Line, Artisan, Sony Screen Gems, Paramount Classics.
Bottom Left Quadrant:
- Title: "DO YOU HAVE TO BE A MAN TO HAVE A SHORT ATTENTION SPAN?"
- Illustration of an old-fashioned television.
- Highlights that the majority of commercials are made by men and that production companies do not hire women as directors.
- A trivia question about who made the first narrative film, with the correct answer being Alice Guy Blache, a pioneering but largely forgotten female director.
Bottom Right Quadrant:
- Statements include: "THE ANATOMICALLY CORRECT OSCAR" depicting that the Oscar statuette is based on a man, noting the low percentage of women who win Oscars relative to men.
- "Wanna Direct? YOU'RE IN THE WRONG BATHROOM." compares women’s deficiency in the directing area to using the wrong bathroom, emphasizing the low percentage of female-directed major films in 1987 (2.4%) and 1999 (4%).
Overall, the poster heavily criticizes the gender inequality prevalent in the film industry, calling attention to the significant underrepresentation and lack of opportunities for female directors through impactful statistics and sarcastic commentary.
Created by gpt-4 on 2025-01-27
The image displays four posters with text and graphics, seemingly addressing issues related to gender inequality in the film industry and beyond. Each poster has a header with bold text and includes the name "Guerrilla Girls." Here is a description of each one:
Top Left Poster:
It has a chart titled "THE SUNDANCE CLASS OF 1996: WHERE ARE THEY FIVE YEARS LATER?" which compares the percent of women and men indie film directors in 1996 and 2001. Below is a speech bubble with a humorous comment, "HEY, I'M JUST GLAD I GOT THE PART. YOU EXPECT ME TO COMPLAIN ABOUT THE WARDROBE???" It also includes information about Guerrilla Girls and Alice Locas.Bottom Left Poster:
This one asks, "DO YOU HAVE TO BE A MAN TO HAVE A SHORT ATTENTION SPAN?" and shows an image resembling a remote control, making a commentary about directors in commercials with statistics. A trivia question below asks which person made the first narrative film, ending with the answer Alice Guy Blache.Top Right Poster:
It states, "THE U.S. SENATE is more progressive than Hollywood," with a comparison of the percentages of female senators versus female directors. Also, there's a notice about certain distributors not supporting films directed by women, with a comparison tally for the year 2000.Bottom Right Poster:
It features a cartoon drawing titled "THE ANATOMICALLY CORRECT OSCAR," which humorously represents the Oscar statue with a male figure and a comment about the race and gender of the winners. Next to it, there's a drawing of bathroom signs, one labeled WOMEN and the other labeled DIRECTORS, the latter with an arrow indicating a more difficult path, and textual commentary on the low percentage of major films directed by women in 1987 and 1999.
Overall, the image captures a series of critical and satirical messages concerning the representation and treatment of women in the film industry, emphasizing the lack of progress in gender equality.
Anthropic Claude
Created by claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022 on 2025-01-27
This appears to be a collection of protest or awareness posters highlighting gender inequality in the film industry. The posters contain various statistics and pointed commentary about representation in Hollywood and filmmaking.
Some key points from the posters include:
- A comparison showing the U.S. Senate having 14% female representation versus Hollywood directors at 4%
- Information about Alice Guy Blaché, who made 700 films and founded the first U.S. movie studio but has been largely forgotten historically
- Statistics about the low percentage of women directors in major films (2.4% in 1987)
- A list of film distributors and their poor track record with women-directed films
- An Oscar statue diagram making a point about industry demographics
The posters appear to be part of a series, likely created to raise awareness about gender disparity in the film industry. They use a mix of statistics, historical facts, and satirical elements to convey their message. The design is simple and stark, using primarily black and white with a clear, direct typography style.
Created by claude-3-opus-20240229 on 2025-01-27
The image contains several different infographic-style posters with text and illustrations making various claims and asking trivia questions.
One poster is titled "THE SUNDANCE CLASS OF 1996: WHERE ARE THEY FIVE YEARS LATER?" and shows a series of charts depicting where filmmakers from the 1996 Sundance Film Festival are in their careers 5 years later.
Another poster states "The U.S. Senate is more progressive than Hollywood." and provides statistics showing the percentage of female Senators (14%) is higher than female film directors (4%).
A third poster displays an image of an Oscar statuette anatomically correct and asks the trivia question "HEY, WHY IS THIS OSCAR A MAN?" The poster goes on to provide multiple choice answers for who made the first Oscar statuette, including "The Maflas Guy", "The Great Train Robbery Guy", and "Alice Guy Blache".
The final portion shows statistics about how film distributors don't know how to pick up women, with data on the extremely low percentage of films directed by women that get picked up for distribution by major companies.
Overall, the posters use charts, statistics, illustrations and trivia to highlight issues of gender inequality and underrepresentation of women in the film industry, both behind the camera as directors and in how the industry operates.
Created by claude-3-haiku-20240307 on 2025-01-27
The image is comprised of two panels. The left panel provides information about the Sundance class of 1996, noting that the films from that year are still relevant 5 years later. The right panel contains various facts and statistics about the U.S. Senate and the film industry, highlighting that the Senate is more progressive than Hollywood when it comes to female representation in leadership roles. The image also includes several humorous illustrations and captions, such as a question about having a short attention span for commercials and a depiction of an "anatomically correct Oscar" statue.
Meta Llama
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-90b-instruct-v1:0 on 2025-01-27
The image presents a collection of posters created by the Guerrilla Girls, a feminist art collective known for their provocative and humorous critiques of the art world and society. The posters are arranged in two columns, with four posters on the left and three on the right.
Left Column:
- "The Sundance Class of 1996: Where Are They Five Years Later?": This poster features a bar graph comparing the number of male and female directors who have made three or more films since 1996. The graph reveals that only 8% of commercial directors are women.
- "Do You Have to Be a Man to Have a Short Attention Span?": This poster showcases a vintage television set with a screen displaying a message about the lack of female directors in commercial production companies.
- "Q. Which Guy Made the First Narrative Film?": This poster poses a question about the first narrative film, with possible answers including "The Melies Guy," "The Great Train Robbery" Guy, and "Alice Guy Blache." The correct answer is Alice Guy Blache, who founded the first U.S. movie studio and has been almost completely forgotten.
- "Hey, I'm Just Glad I Got the Part. You Expect Me to Complain About the Wardrobe?": This poster features a speech bubble with a message about the limited opportunities for women in film, accompanied by a diagram illustrating the distribution of male and female roles in films.
Right Column:
- "The U.S. Senate is more progressive than Hollywood.": This poster highlights the disparity between the number of female senators (14%) and female directors (4%) in Hollywood.
- "These Distributors Don't Know How to Pick Up Women.": This poster lists several film distributors that have released a pathetic number of films directed by women, including Miramax, New Line, and Sony Screen Gems.
- "The Anatomically Correct Oscar": This poster features an illustration of the Oscar statuette with a message about the lack of diversity among Academy Award winners, stating that only 2.4% of major films were directed by women in 1987.
Overall, these posters use humor and satire to highlight the underrepresentation of women in the film industry and the lack of diversity among Academy Award winners.
Amazon Nova
Created by amazon.nova-pro-v1:0 on 2025-01-27
The image contains two pages of a magazine, which seems to be about women's rights. The left page is about the Sundance class of 1996 and where they are five years later. It also contains a question and answer about the first narrative film. The right page is about the U.S. Senate and how it is more progressive than Hollywood. It also contains a question and answer about the anatomically correct Oscar.
Created by amazon.nova-lite-v1:0 on 2025-01-27
The image displays two sides of a flyer with various messages and statistics. The left side features a title "The Sundance Class of 1996: Where Are They Five Years Later?" with a bar graph showing the distribution of films by gender, indicating that 43 men and 21 women directed films in 1996. It also includes a statement about the lack of women directors in commercials and a question about the necessity of being male to have a short attention span. The right side of the flyer contains a statement about the U.S. Senate being more progressive than Hollywood, followed by a list of film distributors and the number of films they released directed by women in 2000. There is also a section titled "The Anatomically Correct Oscar" with a diagram of an Oscar statue and statistics about women's representation in film directing and Oscar wins.
Text analysis
Amazon


















































































































































































































































































































































































































