Some of the reasoning:
>Preliminary assessment also suggests Imagen encodes several social biases and stereotypes, including an overall bias towards generating images of people with lighter skin tones and a tendency for images portraying different professions to align with Western gender stereotypes. Finally, even when we focus generations away from people, our preliminary analysis indicates Imagen encodes a range of social and cultural biases when generating images of activities, events, and objects. We aim to make progress on several of these open challenges and limitations in future work.
Really sad that breakthrough technologies are going to be withheld due to our inability to cope with the results.
We certainly don't want to perpetuate harmful stereotypes. But is it a flaw that the model encodes the world as it really is, statistically, rather than as we would like it to be? By this I mean that there are more light-skinned people in the west than dark, and there are more women nurses than men, which is reflected in the model's training data. If the model only generates images of female nurses, is that a problem to fix, or a correct assessment of the data?
If some particular demographic shows up in 51% of the data but 100% of the model's output shows that one demographic, that does seem like a statistics problem that the model could correct by just picking less likely "next token" predictions.
Also, is it wrong to have localized models? For example, should a model for use in Japan conform to the demographics of Japan, or to that of the world?
I want to be clear here, bias can be introduced at many different points. There's dataset bias, model bias, and training bias. Every model is biased. Every dataset is biased.
Yes, the real world is also biased. But I want to make sure that there are ways to resolve this issue. It is terribly difficult, especially in a DL framework (even more so in a generative model), but it is possible to significantly reduce the real world bias.