Close Menu
Must Have Gadgets –

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    A Deal You Need to See to Believe: Take 25% Off Ray-Ban Meta Smart AI Glasses During This Cyber Week Sale

    December 4, 2025

    Meta says it’s fixing its broken support system, with the help of AI

    December 4, 2025

    One UI 8.5 Testing Officially Begins on the Galaxy S24 Ultra

    December 4, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Must Have Gadgets –
    Trending
    • A Deal You Need to See to Believe: Take 25% Off Ray-Ban Meta Smart AI Glasses During This Cyber Week Sale
    • Meta says it’s fixing its broken support system, with the help of AI
    • One UI 8.5 Testing Officially Begins on the Galaxy S24 Ultra
    • Google’s AI model is getting really good at spoofing phone photos
    • The Nintendo Switch 2 Mario Kart World bundle is still on sale for $50 off right now
    • Billions of Chrome users at risk from 13 security flaws including four high-severity ones — update your browser right now
    • Fire TV devices just got a major Alexa+ upgrade that lets you jump to your favorite movie scene — here’s how it works
    • Using Kohler’s Poop-Analysis Camera? Double Check This Key Privacy Setting First
    • Home
    • Shop
      • Earbuds & Headphones
      • Smartwatches
      • Mobile Accessories
      • Smart Home Devices
      • Laptops & Tablets
    • Gadget Reviews
    • How-To Guides
    • Mobile Accessories
    • Smart Devices
    • More
      • Top Deals
      • Smart Home
      • Tech News
      • Trending Tech
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Must Have Gadgets –
    Home»Tech News»Google’s AI model is getting really good at spoofing phone photos
    Tech News

    Google’s AI model is getting really good at spoofing phone photos

    adminBy adminDecember 4, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Google’s AI model is getting really good at spoofing phone photos
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    I’m starting to understand where Google’s visual AI model gets its name, because after playing around with it for a couple of days, that’s how I’d sum it up: bananas. The images it generates are so realistic it’s bananas. I feel like I’m going bananas after staring at them for too long. And if I had to pinpoint one reason why Nano Banana Pro’s images look so much more realistic than the AI slop that came before them, it’s this: They look like photos taken with a phone camera.

    Sure, the tells are there if you look for them. Take the image at the top of this article of the (not real!) couple on the city sidewalk. The streetlight in the background doesn’t look quite right to me, and some of the building facades — especially farther into the background — look a little strange and blocky. But if I was just scrolling past this photo on social media? No way I’d clock it as AI. The subjects look realistic, but I think the fact that the image doesn’t look too perfect is what sells it.

    The mountain is a little too big and dramatic, but the way the boat, water, and city are rendered looks a lot like how a phone would render them. Image: Nano Banana Pro

    The bright, flat exposure, the generous depth of field, the slightly crunchy details: It all screams phone camera to me. Ben Sandofsky, cofounder of the popular iPhone camera app Halide, agrees. In the AI-generated image of the ferry boat above, he noted the “aggressive image sharpening you encounter on smart phone photos. It’s a visual trick that helps image ‘pop.’” Another hallmark of photos taken with a phone? Noise. “Most AI generated photos feel far too clean. The texture in these photos feel like they came from a tiny smart phone sensor.”

    Even AI-generated King County Metro riders refuse to take their backpacks off on the bus. Image: Nano Banana Pro

    So where is Google’s AI getting its notions about phone photos from? Google Photos would seem like an obvious — and deeply problematic — place to go, but Elijah Lawal, the global communications manager for the Gemini app, says that “for Nano Banana we don’t use Google Photos.” He also tells me that Nano Banana Pro hasn’t been specifically steered toward producing a phone camera look. “One of the huge improvements is that it can connect to Google Search,” he says. If you prompt it to create an infographic about today’s weather, it can go look up the temperature — previously, you would need to include more of that information in your prompt.

    According to Lawal, this is limited to text search and not image search. But being able to go get real-world information on its own might be a key ingredient here. Nano Banana Pro is especially good at adding things to images that make sense in that context — even if you never specifically asked for them. It can add historical elements like period-appropriate clothes and cars without being told expressly to do so. It even added a watermark for the Northwest Multiple Listing Service when I asked it to create a fake Zillow listing for a fake house in Seattle. It’s getting a lot better at understanding the assignment and adding those little details without being prompted to.

    Image: Nano Banana Pro

    I asked Gemini for a Zillow listing for a craftsman-style house with white paint and black trim in West Seattle. It gave back a wordy text-only listing describing the place, but with another prompt, I used Nano Banana Pro to create an image to go with the description. I hadn’t specifically asked for it, but included in the image is a 2023 copyright, which is deeply funny, and a watermark like the one that’s on basically every real estate photo you find in the greater Seattle area. Interestingly, it’s not the current logo — it’s the previous version, which is the same one on every picture of the house I bought in 2018.

    I asked Google where Nano Banana could possibly come up with that, and DeepMind product manager Naina Raisinghani suggested it was a hallucination, offering this statement: “Nano Banana Pro provides major upgrades to character consistency, image generation, and search-grounded accuracy. While this is our most precise image model to date, AI hallucinations can occur. If an image isn’t quite right, we encourage you to retry, as a subsequent attempt often yields a result more in line with your intention.” The thing is, adding the watermark for a real estate listing service seems like the model working exactly as intended.

    Watermark or no, I guess the small print on the “for sale” sign might give this away as AI, or maybe that the potted plants on the front porch look a little too perfect, but honestly? I’m having a hard time believing this house is not real, even though I know in my bones it isn’t. I wouldn’t give it a second thought if I came across it on a real estate website, and the watermark would certainly help sell it as genuine. If AI is getting this good at imitating the things that signal a photo is real, then guys: We are cooked.

    Nano Banana is mashing up a few different places at Apple Park here, but the vibe is right. Interestingly, it added an older Verge logo here, too. Makes you wonder. Image: Nano Banana Pro

    That’s what’s most concerning to me: The AI tells are getting harder to spot, and Nano Banana is getting better at mimicking little details that make the image seem real. We gave it some vague prompts to depict a Verge reporter covering a live event; it added details like a microphone with the Verge logo in the reporter’s hand and a chyron in the lower part of the screen. No misspellings or alien-looking letters. No hands with six fingers. Nothing that would obviously tip it off as AI and plenty of little details to sell it as the real deal.

    A year ago, or even a few months ago, I had a sense that there was a day coming in the future, a day when it wouldn’t be wise to believe any photo or video I saw online from an unfamiliar source unless proven otherwise. This exercise has convinced me that that day isn’t in the future; it’s here now. Tune your AI radar appropriately, and don’t be surprised if it drives you a little bit bananas.

    Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.

    • Allison JohnsonClose

      Allison Johnson

      Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      FollowFollow

      See All by Allison Johnson

    • AIClose

      AI

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      FollowFollow

      See All AI

    • GoogleClose

      Google

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      FollowFollow

      See All Google

    • MobileClose

      Mobile

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      FollowFollow

      See All Mobile

    • ReportClose

      Report

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      FollowFollow

      See All Report

    • TechClose

      Tech

      Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed.

      FollowFollow

      See All Tech

    good Googles model Phone Photos Spoofing
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    admin
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Pixel-art cyberpunk game Replaced arrives in March

    December 4, 2025

    Google’s Recorder app can now generate music on your Pixel 9

    December 4, 2025

    Welcome to “necroprinting”—3D printer nozzle made from mosquito’s proboscis

    December 4, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    A Deal You Need to See to Believe: Take 25% Off Ray-Ban Meta Smart AI Glasses During This Cyber Week Sale

    December 4, 2025

    PayPal’s blockchain partner accidentally minted $300 trillion in stablecoins

    October 16, 2025

    The best AirPods deals for October 2025

    October 16, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    How-To Guides

    How to Disable Some or All AI Features on your Samsung Galaxy Phone

    By adminOctober 16, 20250
    Gadget Reviews

    PayPal’s blockchain partner accidentally minted $300 trillion in stablecoins

    By adminOctober 16, 20250
    Smart Devices

    The best AirPods deals for October 2025

    By adminOctober 16, 20250

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Latest Post

    A Deal You Need to See to Believe: Take 25% Off Ray-Ban Meta Smart AI Glasses During This Cyber Week Sale

    December 4, 2025

    Meta says it’s fixing its broken support system, with the help of AI

    December 4, 2025

    One UI 8.5 Testing Officially Begins on the Galaxy S24 Ultra

    December 4, 2025
    Recent Posts
    • A Deal You Need to See to Believe: Take 25% Off Ray-Ban Meta Smart AI Glasses During This Cyber Week Sale
    • Meta says it’s fixing its broken support system, with the help of AI
    • One UI 8.5 Testing Officially Begins on the Galaxy S24 Ultra
    • Google’s AI model is getting really good at spoofing phone photos
    • The Nintendo Switch 2 Mario Kart World bundle is still on sale for $50 off right now

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    © 2025 must-have-gadgets.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.