Comment by ErroneousBosh
2 months ago
It really is gone. You can predict what you think it might have been, but you can't know what it was.
2 months ago
It really is gone. You can predict what you think it might have been, but you can't know what it was.
it's gone in a single still frame
but across many consecutive frames, the information is spread out temporaly and can be recovered (partially)
the same principle of how you can get a high resolution image from a short video, by extracting the same patch from multiple frames
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_super-resolution
No, it's not "restoring detail". The information is gone.
It is predicting what the information might maybe have been like.
you are arguing with math proofs here, the information is not gone, if it was a real video (as opposed to adversarily generated video)
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That looks interesting. Is there ready-made software that can do this? Doesn't have to be easy to use just useable with a time commitment of a few days.