Ironically, it seems the descriptions are AI-written?
(minor spoiler)
The text accompanying an image of a painting:
> This image shows authentic human photography with natural imperfections, consistent lighting, and realistic proportions that indicate genuine capture rather than artificial generation.
Meindert Hobbema. The Avenue at Middelharnis (1689, National Gallery, London)
What bugs me the most about nearly everyone selling AI products is that they apparently want or need to believe in the power of LLMs for everything, not just the product, and this means that they also generate the explanatory texts and descriptions and readmes and... it makes the product itself feel of a much worse quality.
I don't mind that you're selling an AI product if it's good but at least put some humanity on the marketing side.
I was just thinking this. The wikipedia "signs of ai writing" that another commenter linked to (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Signs_of_AI_writing) mentions LLMs overuse the 'rule of three' (e.g. natural imperfections, consistent lighting, and realistic proportions), haha.
(minor spoiler)
The text accompanying an image of a painting:
> This image shows authentic human photography with natural imperfections, consistent lighting, and realistic proportions that indicate genuine capture rather than artificial generation. Meindert Hobbema. The Avenue at Middelharnis (1689, National Gallery, London)