Reddit seems to use Ai to analyze images, so the content can be indexed by the search. In example I searched for my name (which is also used for the my blog) to see if there are recent posts with “thingsiplay”, because I saw some spike in the stats. But what I instead found is a screenshot of a comment from me made in YouTube. There is no text attached to the post or title, so it must have analyzed the content, right?
https://www.reddit.com/search/?q=thingsiplay&t=week results in

and the post is

Or did I miss something and I make myself a fool here? Does any other community software or forum do this? Is this covered in their User Agreement?
- Not an expert in it, but this isn’t necessarily AI, it could be good ol’ image text recognition that has existed for years now. - Given the recent cooporation with Google and that Google has excellent image text recognition, isn’t this a safe bet? Otherwise Reddit would have this done without AI for years. 
- It would make sense to include matching images in the search results and other engagement driven recommendations. There are quite a few screenshots too, so if the search can only handle text, it’s going to completely miss a pretty large category. 
 
- OpticalCharacterRecognition is a pretty common practice that’s been around for a century… (1920s) - It makes a lot of sense when you consider those with visual impairments. 
- Could have been alt text - Posting images on Reddit allow to add alt-text? And the user has to add the name as alt-text, otherwise it wouldn’t have one. I don’t remember that was even possible. - I think there’s an option to add captions. I left during the June strike wouldn’t know - You can add captions to images inside text posts - those are used for alt text. You can’t add alt text to image posts though. - Trust me, I would know. - Incidentally, they’re automatically adding the subreddit and post title together for the image’s alt text, which still doesn’t include OP’s name. - Oh oki 
 
 
 
 






