A couple of months ago, we reported how Google Search will label if a picture was AI-generated, edited by photograph modifying software program or taken with a digicam by working with Coalition for Content material Provenance and Authenticity (C2PA) as a technical normal. Nicely, now Google formally helps C2PA metadata within the about this image function.
Google wrote this morning, Google Search now helps this [C2PA] metadata within the “About this picture” function.”
Google up to date its image meta data documentation so as to add a brand new part for “How C2PA metadata can seem in Google Search outcomes.”
The brand new part reads:
If a picture comprises C2PA metadata, Google can extract these particulars and will present info within the “About this image” function, equivalent to how the picture was created or if it was edited with AI instruments. This metadata comes from a signer, which is often an app, machine, or service (for instance, photograph modifying software program, the digicam itself, or different companies that modify or create pictures) that meets the next situations:
- The app, machine, or service has adopted C2PA model 2.1 or later.
- The picture’s manifest have to be signed by a certificates from a Certification Authority on the C2PA Trust List.
It does look like Adobe merchandise, like Photoshop, Illustrated, and others, do assist this metadata.
I simply surprise the way it handles the picture above, which I generate utilizing Midjourney AI after which edit later in Photoshop.
Discussion board dialogue at X.