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Scientists Create Easier Way To Embed Objects Into Video

Ashutosh Saxena writes "Stanford artificial intelligence researchers have developed software that makes it easy to reach inside an existing video and place a photo on the wall so realistically that it looks like it was there from the beginning. The photo is not pasted on top of the existing video, but embedded in it. It works for videos as well — you can play a video on a wall inside your video. The technology can cheaply do some of the tricks normally performed by expensive commercial editing systems. The researchers suggest that anyone with a video camera might earn some spending money by agreeing to have unobtrusive corporate logos placed inside their videos before they are posted online."

15 of 236 comments (clear)

  1. John Holmes move over... by TheNecromancer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Yes! Now you too can star in your very own pr0n movie!

    Ah, the wonders of software!

    --
    Attention all planets of the Solar Federation! We have assumed control! - Neil Peart
  2. Stanford sold out by coolsnowmen · · Score: 2, Funny

    It is nice to see top universities working on better advertising. You know, I was thinking to myself just yesterday, "There is just not enough product placement in society. I hope someone makes it easier to put advertising in digital media."

  3. Somebody tell the BertIsEvil guy. by sneakyimp · · Score: 3, Funny

    Somebody tell the BertIsEvil guy.

  4. Re:Oh, thank goodness! by drexlor · · Score: 2, Funny

    Maybe someday it will be like in Futurama:

    Leela: Didn't you have ad's in the 20th century?
    Fry: Well sure, but not in our dreams. Only on TV and radio. And in magazines. And movies. And at ball games and on buses and milk cartons and t-shirts and written on the sky. But not in dreams. No siree!

    Last night I dreamed about The Office cast in a Seinfield episode. Maybe NBC is already working on the technology.

  5. Aww I wanted real poo.. by DigitalReverend · · Score: 2, Funny

    ummmm.... It sucks when all my wit is spent in the subject line of my response.

    --
    I read Slashdot for the headlines, because the headlines, unlike the articles, are usually original and never duplicated
  6. Re:Nothing new here by BetterSense · · Score: 2, Funny

    Like your Soliton Radar, it's all made from currently existing technology.

  7. Re:oh look, its the anti-ad crowd by Mystra_x64 · · Score: 2, Funny

    There are ads on Slashdot? (O_o)

    --
    Quick way to get 30% Funny 70% Troll: defend Opera browser on /.
  8. Re:remove advertising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Don't worry. They're already lobbying for the creation of a Digital Millennium Advertising Act to allowing them to sue you for all the money you and your descendants to ten generations will make for the unthinkable crime of removing, or heaven forbid, ignoring their advertisements, as doing so is purely unAmerican, undermines our glorious freedom, and above all, aids terrorists!

  9. Re:oh look, its the anti-ad crowd by Zarquil · · Score: 2, Funny

    We call them "Slashvertisements" or something like that. I think it's the uninteresting stories that are promoting a product and / or service.

    It's not like we're reading TFA's anyways..

  10. Re:It will, and does by MarkvW · · Score: 3, Funny

    The word 'brainwash' has always intrigued me. It sounds like it would be a good thing to have your brain washed. It would then be clean, fresh, and ready for its next adventure!

    Besides, people with dirty minds probably could use a little brainwashing.

    Greetings from Stepford!

  11. Re:It will, and does by Yvan256 · · Score: 3, Funny

    You can wash my brain if you want, but only with Tide or Tylenol.

    Wait, why did I say Tylenol?

  12. Re:It will, and does by dfsmith · · Score: 2, Funny

    I guess the Advil advertising works on you then.

  13. Re:Youtube by lysergic.acid · · Score: 3, Funny

    yea, it's kinda sad that they developed such a cool tech, and the first thing they thought to do with it is to plaster everyone's home videos with Coca-Cola logos. i mean, how much are you really going to be paid by Coca-Cola to add their logo to your home videos? does video documentation of your child's first steps or first words really need corporate sponsorship?

    some things don't need to be monetized. now, covering up the playboy posters in videos of your dorm room to send to your parents--that's a useful application.

  14. Re:Generics by Ihmhi · · Score: 3, Funny

    I've tried generic alcohol before. It didn't sit with me well at all.

    Long story short, keep away from the Isopropyl brand of hard liquor. It may be cheap, but you sure do pay for it tomorrow!

  15. Re:It will, and does by shadow349 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Tyson Foods burned two dozen Mexicans alive in Georgia in the 1980s because they chained the fire exits shut to keep them from stealing chicken parts (a manager spent 2 years in prison for twenty five horrible deaths) and I'll pay MORE for generic meat than buy Tyson.

    You are basing your opinion of a whole company and all of its current and future products on the actions of a small group of people who made an error in judgment 20+ years ago? Sounds pretty petty to me.

    - Ryan Jacobson
    Union Carbide, Project Manager
    Bhopal Division