CALL it advertisement hacking. Technology-inspired artists have designed ways for you to mask or perhaps even delete company logos in your field of view as you wander around a city or shopping centre.
The trend subverts a technology called augmented reality (AR), by which virtual information – say restaurant ratings – is overlain on the real world as you peer through smart glasses or a smartphone camera.
New York artist has designed a program called , which detects corporate logos in a video stream, then replaces them. The software uses a computer-vision system, normally used in robotics, to learn to recognise logos at different angles and in varied lighting. His current prototype overlays a logo with a photo of that company’s CEO.
Advertisement
The project is still under development and does not yet run in real time, but Crouse’s goal is to produce a video filter for removing logos from, say, home movies.
Another project, called ““, augments ads in a visual display with works of art. It’s a pair of binoculars containing a camera, a display, and a processor running image-processing software. “We’re so used to seeing these billboards in our cities, that we’ve almost come to accept that it’s kind of a natural state, and I think that’s something to worry about,” the project’s designer , an artist based in Berlin, Germany, told the meeting in June.
“We’ve come to accept billboards as a kind of natural state – that’s something to worry about”
Another New York-based artist, , is using AR to make a political point about the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. The Leak in your Home Town is a smartphone app that overlays an animation of a leaking oil pipe over BP logos in gas stations or on billboards.
Jan Herling at the University of Technology in Ilmenau, Germany, has taken such visual augmentation a step further, with software that deletes objects altogether from a video feed. It’s not specifically for deleting logos, but it’s easy to see how it could be applied in that way.
Peering through a tablet computer’s camera, a user selects an object to remove – a stapler on a desk, say – and Herling’s software removes it, in real time, from the tablet display. It works by removing the selected object, then intelligently enhancing frames back to “normal” by filling in removed space. Herling calls it “diminished reality”.