Josh is too details oriented with detecting CIE videos.
Kids these days are neurologically trained to tell simply by feeling that something is off. AI is to the point that you really should not look for a smoking gun in the fine details, like you would with photoshop, but in the broader strokes.
AI struggles with portraying the real world in all of its fine details and interactions. I don't think this will ever change, While its likelyhood to make mistakes may approach 0, it is completely divorced from our perception of reality, unlike the photoshop guys back in the day. We lean on this advantage to discriminate. This is the sort of task that is better fit to the subconscious classification that younger people have a much easier time training, to the point it even happens unintentionally.
So, if your gut feeling is that a video is suspect, maybe it is.
Some things that I've picked up on:
-Actions or lack thereof of living things is irrational for that creature. May not be something you can form into an idea, but a base feeling that one or more people or animals are not acting as you would expect.
-Collisions, movement, or other physical interactions of objects or substances are illogical or again just "feel wrong". Generally easier to pick out and point at as a specific mistake, which makes them liable to be fixed in the future.
-Voices, particularly when multiple prople are talking, do not feel possible.
A couple examples:
Shape store:
Hopeful African American of Color (Black) opens up the shape store. Josh correctly identifies that a person of melon would not know what a Septagon was. He however missed that the store in the background does not feel like anything.
He also has the AI accent.
The shape store videos are excellently produced as production involves significant work in post to cover AI's flaws.
Matt Jarbo smashing milk on the floor of Wal-Mart during today's stream:
Everything felt normal and natural until the actual throw. This is much more obvious and poorly done than the shape store. The milk goes from being quickly cast down as you would expect to being lightly dropped in an instant, but then launches ittself into the ground anyways. It then hits the ground and breaks, then fixes ittself and bounces, before hitting the ground and rolling (???????) while leaking from the top with the cap still on.
Anyone unfortunate enough to drop a gallon plastic jug of milk will have learned the following:
1. Square jugs do not roll.
2. Full jugs do not bounce.
3. Sealed jugs will split along the side and not at the top.
Those are all details, which are funny but not the point. Point is Josh should have stopped focusing on the cheese aisle and actually looked at the focua of the video.