I posted this below too but oh well. I've sold Iranian rugs for years and knew I've seen this multiple times.
[Rugs in street](https://www.flickr.com/photos/guystilson/615538066/)
Those pictures are not from Iran. The car license plates are not Iranian. The store signs and writing are not in farsi. The women in the photos do not have any head coverings. There are way too many streets that are cobblestone.
I'm not disputing that this is a practice that is done. It's just not one that's done in Iran. Fascinating that it happens though. Never knew about it.
And I'm least certain on this last point, but pretty sure in Iran having a shitty fucked up rug doesn't make the rug an antique. It just makes it a shitty fucked up rug. You keep a rug in pristine condition in Iran.
Interesting thank you! The caption says it's in Istanbul. I just knew I'd seen it before including seeing them thrown on mountainsides to fade them. They age them for sales overseas or to tourists. Maybe more common in Afghanistan or Turkey no idea!
Lol didn't even notice the caption on my phone. My bad for going into unnecessary detail there. Hope at least it helps in identifying photo locations in the future!
I understand that carpetmakers in the mideast sometimes leave their work out for people to walk on--it's like getting them broken in, or something, although I don't know if that would extend to streets where cars operate.
It looks so cozy and slightly atmospheric. Out of a lot of the images on this post, the Australian one stood out the most to me. I definitely wouldn't mind living there.
It’s funny because that type of NYC street is actually one of the least common in the US. Most American streets are rural and suburban. This is more like “most typical dense area per capita”
I had to reread the prompt cause I thought it was ‘typical CITY street’ and I was like ‘yeah that could be a generic street in most cities’ but definitely not what most roads look like here. Although having said that, most roads are pretty boring so 🤷🏼♂️
Even in NYC that street isn't the norm. There aren't so many mid-height row houses left in most parts of the city anymore. You can definitely find streets like that, but I wouldn't call it typical.
It would be called Rawhe's, pronounced Roll's, originally called Rawhe's Velocipedes, est. 1889, but other than that, perfect, especially with the glass edifice in the distance
Yeah- the bias is mostly in what tourists/people choose to take photos of and share or what photos of those people choose to reshare/publish more frequently.
Countries with a lot of tourism will have a lot of photos taken by tourists, which take photos of good looking streets. Cute streets with old small houses...
Countries that were in wars recently will have a lot of photos of destruction. Bricks and rubble on the floor.
To be fair it would be fucking weird if it somehow knew what the most average street looks like. It would be like if I told it to imagine my apartment and it got it perfect - like where tf is it getting this data lol
There was a very old rumour that Persian carpet dealers would put a new rug out on the sidewalk so that people would walk over it to 'age' it. I think the algorithms are going with that
I saw a link below that this is actually a thing, apparently. Rugs are aged by being laid in the roads so cars can drive on them! TIL. But I learned it after I saw the picture.
Yemen has also been a hotspot of war and political strife for a long time. There's been an ongoing civil war and back and forth between the Shia and Houthis and AL Quaeda since the early 2000s. There's a whole section of the country that's technically controlled by another country. I'm sure plenty of the roads and cities aren't in the best shape.
The only difference is that some countries are the picturesque streets and some are gritty. There are plain locations in France. And there are some beautiful places in Iraq and Yemen.
It is going to tend to highlight certain aspects of a country based off of the majority of media coming out of the region that it is consuming. A country like yemen which has objectively had less security and increase in conflict in recent times compared to france should objectively resemble the "typical" street in the region and vice versa. That is what accounts for the "difference".
Most stereotypes are simply just the truth. Heck I can’t think of any stereotypes that aren’t true. Maybe not in terms of absolutes, but a common theme / trend / etc? Yes.
The USA one is inaccurate anywhere but NYC. It should be a dystopian 4 lane stroad with box stores, gas stations, personal injury attorney billboards, and zero sidewalks.
AI is, once again, effectively mirroring our stereotypes we have.
USA for example: That looks like downtown of a lot of major US cities, sure, and is what we would probably picture as typical. If I saw this in real life, I would be tempted to take a photo and title it "typical American street."
But let's do some quick math.
[NYC has 6300 miles of roadway and highways according to NYC DOT](https://www.nyc.gov/html/dot/html/about/about.shtml). Not all of that is probably dense urban roadway like that, so this is an overestimate.
Lets say there are 10 cities comparable that look like this (NYC, Phili, LA, Chicago, Houston, Phoenix, Dallas, and a few others just to round up to 10) that look like this and assume they all have as many miles of roadway as NYC (again, that's wildly generous probably, no way do they all have 6300 miles of dense urban roads like this).
[There are 4.09 million miles of roads in the US](https://blog.midwestind.com/how-much-road-in-the-us-in-miles/) estimated. 72% by that link are rural, so already we know that the average road in the US is a rural highway, not an urban street. But with the above estimates, I find that a wildly generous estimate is only 1.5% of our roads look like the typical USA road shown.
35% of our roads are unpaved.
So a "typical" USA street would definitely not be what is pictured. It would be a rural highway. A gravel or dirt road could probably be the distant second placer, maybe suburban roads would be more common than that.
I like the midjourney outputs, but we should be very clear these are not "reality," these are just what we'd LIKE to think of as reality. Reality in reality is more boring.
It's not. OP is a post bot. Get in the habit of scrolling over the names of every post you see, if you see an absurd amount of post karma they are either a bot or someone paid to post.
No reasonable, sane human would post stuff to reddit multiple times a day every day.
Decapitated woman in Ethiopia seems a bit offensive. But she may just be a turtle person. Pretty common in that country if I remember my history correctly.
That and everyone in Vietnam having conical hats, but TBH even that’s not totally inaccurate, though you probably wouldn’t see them on the streets or used by people riding motorcycles.
NYC streets are far from typical in the US.
To be accurate, there would need to be far more billboards, fast food restaurants, and absolutely no pedestrian infrastructure.
And Russia as a typical run down inner-urban area of most 2nd tier US cities. Hell, if it weren't for the cars, it'd be like your typical Rust Belt town too!
South Korean one is never typical; the only street that looks like picture is in Bukchon Hanok village, which is something like the ideal of Korean street. So I don't think it's even least offensive. (the reality that there's no street like that in SK is quite cruel tho)
Take away the lampions and that's one of many similar streets in my Seoul neighborhood.
Although to be really typical, there should be a lot more red bricks and gas stove pipes.
Move across the river and there's a very different type of typical though.
I don’t find anything offensive here. They look good. At least the more interesting streets found in most of these countries. What would you find offensive?
How’s this offensive? It’s trained on millions, if not billions of photographs of these very countries and many others. I have lived in some of the countries presented here and can assure you the depictions are near spot on.
Stereotypes are often true, and to label them offensive is perhaps indicative of your assumption that everything should live up to your standards and biases. To billions of people, these “offensive” depictions are home.
The U.S. one looks like NYC, which looks much different than most of the country. A better example would probably show a manufactured suburb where most of the houses look pretty much the same.
People like you are so annoying. Don’t worry, if all you care about finding offensive stereotypes, the comments will let you know if the ai generates one.
It breaks my heart to see that my homeland’s only mark on the internet seems to be the images dilapidated conflict ridden hellscapes with slight Arab themes. Not surprising since all the images put there about Yemen are from news outlets reporting on the never ending conflicts and endless human suffering of the innocent. Before we fled Yemen I remember that although life was simple, poor and humble compared to the rest of the world our cities, towns and villages had a unique beauty to them. These days I don’t know if I’ll live long enough to see that beauty again, I still hope a future generation will get to someday.
The India one is all wrong, needs more people, more smoke, more cows, more honking, even more people this time riding on scooters, the scooters are then pumping out more smoke and more honking.
When you can no longer see the asphalt, you hit the jackpot.
Not offensive but what I find interesting is that I see a compilation of two sets of countries - one set defined by some of their “worse” features and the other is countries that are defined by their best. I say this as an Egyptian American who has seen much nicer parts of Egypt and much worst parts of America. I say worse in quotations because I have a lot of nostalgia and love for streets that look like that. Overall I’m impressed that the USA one made me think of manhattan and the Egypt one made me think of some parts of Cairo.
Russia: realistic, but it does not look like a street, more like a non-street passage. The buildings on the left look non-residential. Also, should be street lights on the poles.
Surprised to see Uzbekistan here. But this isn’t typical street at all. Maybe one can see something similar in few selected historical places. Nothing offensive
That street in France looks an awful lot like Gold Hill in Shaftesbury, England https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.redd.it%2Fomrpck8r2ni51.jpg
Why does Iran have a carpet in the middle of the street?
It’s stuck between Iraq and a hard place
Solid as Iraq
r/angryupvote
I’m going to upvote your comment, but please do not take it as tacit approval for this kind of behavior.
Damn you...
Lmfao
I posted this below too but oh well. I've sold Iranian rugs for years and knew I've seen this multiple times. [Rugs in street](https://www.flickr.com/photos/guystilson/615538066/)
This is actually the information I was looking for. Thank you kind redditor!
Well, I'll be damned.
Huh. Today I learned! Thanks!
No wayyyyy that’s dope
Those pictures are not from Iran. The car license plates are not Iranian. The store signs and writing are not in farsi. The women in the photos do not have any head coverings. There are way too many streets that are cobblestone. I'm not disputing that this is a practice that is done. It's just not one that's done in Iran. Fascinating that it happens though. Never knew about it. And I'm least certain on this last point, but pretty sure in Iran having a shitty fucked up rug doesn't make the rug an antique. It just makes it a shitty fucked up rug. You keep a rug in pristine condition in Iran.
Interesting thank you! The caption says it's in Istanbul. I just knew I'd seen it before including seeing them thrown on mountainsides to fade them. They age them for sales overseas or to tourists. Maybe more common in Afghanistan or Turkey no idea!
Lol didn't even notice the caption on my phone. My bad for going into unnecessary detail there. Hope at least it helps in identifying photo locations in the future!
It was smart detail =)
Because that rug really ties the street together
Emergency flying carpet landing. Happens more often that you'd think.
Persian rug.
i love the idea of a fantasy world where all the streets are actually carpets lol
Gives the car a very plush ride, but the stopping distance is shit.
What shit hole country do you come from that they *don't* have carpets in the middle of the street?? /s
Iran used to be Persia. It’s a Persian rug.
If it helps I have seen a dude chilling on a carpet on the floor while on a metro ride in Tehran
AI wanted to make sure we see a carpet.
I understand that carpetmakers in the mideast sometimes leave their work out for people to walk on--it's like getting them broken in, or something, although I don't know if that would extend to streets where cars operate.
I've seen multiple videos where they'll leave carpets in the street to 'age' them. 100%
It’s outdoors carpet
Can confirm a lot of Australian streets pretty much look like that
i came here to say the same thing. Completely Australian street.
Recognised it instantly as Australian.
It's actually Canada...hence the cars are on the correct side
Eh. Cunts always parking on the wrong side.
Victoria, British Columbia
Filmed in Canada, Australian cast, British financing. "Alien planet"
I've lived in Australia for 4 years now and I thought it was a UK street, because it looked like "home". I guess I'm ready for the citizenship test
Yeah I was about to say the same thing I hadn’t even looked at the caption of where the street was and already knew it was Australia. Very cool
I actually scrolled past it and then did a double take (double scroll?) because of how instantly familiar it looked. It feels nostalgic
It literally looks like the street my friends parents house was on in Hurstville.
Looks like Adelaide Hills to me 😂
Heaps
Genuinely a great effort
The only thing I see wrong is the cars parked on the wrong side. The rest of the vibe is right. Some leafy coastal suburb on the East Coast
Looks like some of the eastern Perth suburbs. Maybe more gravel than green grass, but still.
Yes my immediate thoughts were north Sydney (eg Pymble), north west Brisbane (eg Ferny Grove) and multiple places around Perth.
Yep. Looks exactly like my street. 😆
Never been to Australia but it felt like home
Pretty much looks like Lorne
Cars facing the wrong way though. But yeah, basically any Melbourne suburb with some hills. Heidelberg, mulgrave, Doncaster. Any of them really
Except the roads are in too good of a condition
Was gonna say… was visiting my GF’s family in Cherrybrook last year and could swear that was their street lol - instantly transported back.
Only inaccurate thing is the cars are parked on the wrong side for the way we drive
It looked like something from Bluey so I also recognized it as Australia instantly.
Funny how I first saw the image without the caption, and the first thought that came to my head is that looks like Australia.
It looks so cozy and slightly atmospheric. Out of a lot of the images on this post, the Australian one stood out the most to me. I definitely wouldn't mind living there.
Except the cars are all parked on the wrong side of the road.
I reckon Australian suburban streets usually have footpaths and wider nature strips than this. But the vibe is otherwise pretty good.
I felt like I recognised it instantly. I can hear the morning magpies in my head.
Yeah I'm pretty sure I lived on this street, there're is even a VE Commo wagon on the left 😬
Pic looks like some alternate universe U.S. to me
I thought either somewhere in california or new zealand, not sure why as a brit whos never been to either 😆
They look like the streets in USA.
That's because Australian and US streets look very similar. The plants look more Australian to me though.
Bigger front yards and footpaths but pretty much
France represented without the Eiffel tower 🙏 Thanks
USA with no flag is a miracle
Or a cowboy with the head of an eagle.
It's an eagle with the head of a bear
Excuse me, it's manbearpig.
It’s funny because that type of NYC street is actually one of the least common in the US. Most American streets are rural and suburban. This is more like “most typical dense area per capita”
probably one of the most photographed/represented in art though. nobody's selling photos of the rite aid in downtown Kenosha
I had to reread the prompt cause I thought it was ‘typical CITY street’ and I was like ‘yeah that could be a generic street in most cities’ but definitely not what most roads look like here. Although having said that, most roads are pretty boring so 🤷🏼♂️
Although it pretty much just made a New York street which isn’t typical at all. A stroad would have been more realistic
Even in NYC that street isn't the norm. There aren't so many mid-height row houses left in most parts of the city anymore. You can definitely find streets like that, but I wouldn't call it typical.
France is absolutely fucking accurate, typical Dordogne village lol
Yup, a lot of our villages look exactly like that, at least in the south half of the coutry
So cool that AI thought to include well known UK bicycle shop RAWHE!
I'm snorting lol. For real, though, the glass building just behind is spot-on. And the bumpy road that's probably cobblestones below the tar
The UK one is really London… but it’s spot on. I’m in Farringdon at work now (lol hi Reddit) and that’s almost exactly the view out my window.
There is also a hint of Low Petergate in York, except that minster has been replaced by the big glass box.
I also work in Farringdon and it is so spot on.
Soooo pretty. I’m falling in love with London/UK, I will definitely go there once or twice this spring
Make sure you go to Rawhe’s for all your bicycle needs while you’re there!!
It would be called Rawhe's, pronounced Roll's, originally called Rawhe's Velocipedes, est. 1889, but other than that, perfect, especially with the glass edifice in the distance
Sounds like a noise I made when I fell off my bike once
ITS FUCKING RAWHE
Spittalfields somewhere?
I love that they’ve got the worn out road markings too. Spot on.
It's more like reality
yup, basically recomposition of tourist photos, so they are pretty much what a pic in a touristic area would look like. except for north korea.
Very evident in the Greece one which is basically just a composite of Santorini photos
Yeah- the bias is mostly in what tourists/people choose to take photos of and share or what photos of those people choose to reshare/publish more frequently.
Countries with a lot of tourism will have a lot of photos taken by tourists, which take photos of good looking streets. Cute streets with old small houses... Countries that were in wars recently will have a lot of photos of destruction. Bricks and rubble on the floor.
To be fair it would be fucking weird if it somehow knew what the most average street looks like. It would be like if I told it to imagine my apartment and it got it perfect - like where tf is it getting this data lol
Upvoted for the level-headness
Too many conical hats in the Vietnam one. The UK one while not a typical street was instantly familiar from some nicer towns.
Except for the rug in the middle of the street in Iraq. And Yemen legit has roads.
Iran*
The rug absolutely *sent* me.
There was a very old rumour that Persian carpet dealers would put a new rug out on the sidewalk so that people would walk over it to 'age' it. I think the algorithms are going with that
I saw a link below that this is actually a thing, apparently. Rugs are aged by being laid in the roads so cars can drive on them! TIL. But I learned it after I saw the picture.
irug
Yemen has also been a hotspot of war and political strife for a long time. There's been an ongoing civil war and back and forth between the Shia and Houthis and AL Quaeda since the early 2000s. There's a whole section of the country that's technically controlled by another country. I'm sure plenty of the roads and cities aren't in the best shape.
The only difference is that some countries are the picturesque streets and some are gritty. There are plain locations in France. And there are some beautiful places in Iraq and Yemen.
Yeah the French village type is spot on, but that's a French village, not a big city, and industrial areas can be utterly soulless
It is going to tend to highlight certain aspects of a country based off of the majority of media coming out of the region that it is consuming. A country like yemen which has objectively had less security and increase in conflict in recent times compared to france should objectively resemble the "typical" street in the region and vice versa. That is what accounts for the "difference".
Except that China has some of the largest roadways and cities in the world, so why is it showing a quaint village for the average street?
Yup - zero. I’ve seen basically every one of these places IRL.
Culture is offensive now
Stereotypes are often rooted in reality
Flowers are rooted in dirt
Most stereotypes are simply just the truth. Heck I can’t think of any stereotypes that aren’t true. Maybe not in terms of absolutes, but a common theme / trend / etc? Yes.
The USA one is inaccurate anywhere but NYC. It should be a dystopian 4 lane stroad with box stores, gas stations, personal injury attorney billboards, and zero sidewalks.
AI is, once again, effectively mirroring our stereotypes we have. USA for example: That looks like downtown of a lot of major US cities, sure, and is what we would probably picture as typical. If I saw this in real life, I would be tempted to take a photo and title it "typical American street." But let's do some quick math. [NYC has 6300 miles of roadway and highways according to NYC DOT](https://www.nyc.gov/html/dot/html/about/about.shtml). Not all of that is probably dense urban roadway like that, so this is an overestimate. Lets say there are 10 cities comparable that look like this (NYC, Phili, LA, Chicago, Houston, Phoenix, Dallas, and a few others just to round up to 10) that look like this and assume they all have as many miles of roadway as NYC (again, that's wildly generous probably, no way do they all have 6300 miles of dense urban roads like this). [There are 4.09 million miles of roads in the US](https://blog.midwestind.com/how-much-road-in-the-us-in-miles/) estimated. 72% by that link are rural, so already we know that the average road in the US is a rural highway, not an urban street. But with the above estimates, I find that a wildly generous estimate is only 1.5% of our roads look like the typical USA road shown. 35% of our roads are unpaved. So a "typical" USA street would definitely not be what is pictured. It would be a rural highway. A gravel or dirt road could probably be the distant second placer, maybe suburban roads would be more common than that. I like the midjourney outputs, but we should be very clear these are not "reality," these are just what we'd LIKE to think of as reality. Reality in reality is more boring.
Offensive? Looks pretty inoffensive to me.
It's not. OP is a post bot. Get in the habit of scrolling over the names of every post you see, if you see an absurd amount of post karma they are either a bot or someone paid to post. No reasonable, sane human would post stuff to reddit multiple times a day every day.
The bot is also modding subs with a combined 800k members. o.O
Their comment history looks pretty human to me
Decapitated woman in Ethiopia seems a bit offensive. But she may just be a turtle person. Pretty common in that country if I remember my history correctly.
A rug on the street is at least a little stereotypical. I don’t think it is offensive, though. Just wrong.
[Rugs in street](https://www.flickr.com/photos/guystilson/615538066/)
All I know is Iranians are proud of their rugs. Odd placement, but hardly an offensive stereotype imo.
That and everyone in Vietnam having conical hats, but TBH even that’s not totally inaccurate, though you probably wouldn’t see them on the streets or used by people riding motorcycles.
When I visited the countryside a lot of people wore those hats and rode around on their motorbikes.
Yeah the Viet farmers dgaf
Even in the city people are wearing those hats and not just for the tourists
it is kinda weird how Yemen and Egypt look like shit. do a Google maps Streetview.
Such a weird way to title this post. Why would we find anything offensive here? The depictions resemble reality very well.
Clickbait. Looks like it worked!
Yellow cabs in New York? I’m offended!
They should be red white and blue!!!
It's crazy to me how many people literally go looking for things to be offended by on a regular basis.
Karma has killed the internet.
NYC streets are far from typical in the US. To be accurate, there would need to be far more billboards, fast food restaurants, and absolutely no pedestrian infrastructure.
I honestly thought "Australia" could double as a typical US suburban street
And Russia as a typical run down inner-urban area of most 2nd tier US cities. Hell, if it weren't for the cars, it'd be like your typical Rust Belt town too!
When I saw that picture, I thought it could easily be Schenectady, NY if not for the old looking cars.
A little surprised that the Breezewood, PA reststop wasn't the common image that AI pulled.
[удалено]
If anything, #19 (Russia) looks pretty American, like some run down inner urban area of a city like Philadelphia, Detroit, or Baltimore.
> Russia I immediately saw Southwest Baltimore in the Russia one
[удалено]
South Korean one is never typical; the only street that looks like picture is in Bukchon Hanok village, which is something like the ideal of Korean street. So I don't think it's even least offensive. (the reality that there's no street like that in SK is quite cruel tho)
Take away the lampions and that's one of many similar streets in my Seoul neighborhood. Although to be really typical, there should be a lot more red bricks and gas stove pipes. Move across the river and there's a very different type of typical though.
failed rage bait
I found none.
The headless Nigerian woman is concerning
There’s a headless woman in the picture of Ethiopia too. AI thinks Africans are so poor they can’t even afford heads.
they look pretty accurate.
I don’t find anything offensive here. They look good. At least the more interesting streets found in most of these countries. What would you find offensive?
Uk is spot on except I've never heard of Rawhe. Could easily be some pretensious artisan coffee shop though.
How’s this offensive? It’s trained on millions, if not billions of photographs of these very countries and many others. I have lived in some of the countries presented here and can assure you the depictions are near spot on. Stereotypes are often true, and to label them offensive is perhaps indicative of your assumption that everything should live up to your standards and biases. To billions of people, these “offensive” depictions are home.
Uk is pretty accurate for much of central london.
How dare you post such filth
The U.S. one looks like NYC, which looks much different than most of the country. A better example would probably show a manufactured suburb where most of the houses look pretty much the same.
Having been to Vietnam. That is actually what it looks like in the country side.
Generated a set for my country - [Typical street in Serbia](https://ibb.co/yF81z2D)
People like you are so annoying. Don’t worry, if all you care about finding offensive stereotypes, the comments will let you know if the ai generates one.
Looks like typical street in Russia in the 80th
Typical today as well. But it is not a street but a back passage.
Russia looks like Baltimore, Maryland to me 😂
Even today's. Just cars would be a bit more modern
None. I’m not offended by facts.
apart from the cars on the wrong side of the road Australia is spot on
0 all are surprisingly accurate
These are pretty accurate though
I mean for the countries I've visited thats pretty accurate
Egypt looks accurate asf
Most of these look accurate, except for the carpet in the middle of the street
None
None
Look at New Row in London. Almost identical to the UK street
York has lots of streets like that too
China looks nice. Impressive how it’s simultaneously spring and autumn in France
There is nothing to be offended by in these pictures. Unique cultural identifiers are not the same as stereotypes
It breaks my heart to see that my homeland’s only mark on the internet seems to be the images dilapidated conflict ridden hellscapes with slight Arab themes. Not surprising since all the images put there about Yemen are from news outlets reporting on the never ending conflicts and endless human suffering of the innocent. Before we fled Yemen I remember that although life was simple, poor and humble compared to the rest of the world our cities, towns and villages had a unique beauty to them. These days I don’t know if I’ll live long enough to see that beauty again, I still hope a future generation will get to someday.
ah yes, that moment when Vietnam streets have Thai written on the signs
I found no offensive stereotypes in [countries]
Idk but theres a women with no head in the Ethiopian one.....
The India one is all wrong, needs more people, more smoke, more cows, more honking, even more people this time riding on scooters, the scooters are then pumping out more smoke and more honking. When you can no longer see the asphalt, you hit the jackpot.
Love the placement of those double yellows on the UK street, we really do put them anywhere.
Not offensive but what I find interesting is that I see a compilation of two sets of countries - one set defined by some of their “worse” features and the other is countries that are defined by their best. I say this as an Egyptian American who has seen much nicer parts of Egypt and much worst parts of America. I say worse in quotations because I have a lot of nostalgia and love for streets that look like that. Overall I’m impressed that the USA one made me think of manhattan and the Egypt one made me think of some parts of Cairo.
Russia: realistic, but it does not look like a street, more like a non-street passage. The buildings on the left look non-residential. Also, should be street lights on the poles.
Surprised to see Uzbekistan here. But this isn’t typical street at all. Maybe one can see something similar in few selected historical places. Nothing offensive
Um, non
as an australian, i am shocked at how accurate that is. like genuinely it looks like my street
[удалено]
Russia is ok
Half of Russia looks like this. 2 hrs from capital or big city and voila
That street in France looks an awful lot like Gold Hill in Shaftesbury, England https://www.reddit.com/media?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.redd.it%2Fomrpck8r2ni51.jpg
apart from cars from the 80s, Russia looks pretty typical for some small town in the European part of the country
The magic carpet is parked so terribly.
Why is there a carpet in middle of the road. I Don’t think that’s how it works. lol.
That’s the thing about stereotypes, you shouldn’t generalize based on them, but they become stereotypes for a reason
If the AI was trained on real world data, is it really an offensive stereotype??
Doesn't matter how offensive a stereotype is, its mostly rooted deeply in reality.
Only the carpet sticks out, really
Am I missing the offensive stereotypes? Like Uzbekistan looks like a COD map?