More

    I Tried to See How I’ll Age Using AI. It Wasn’t as Bad as I Thought

    There’s nothing more attractive than someone who wears their age well. Society idolizes youth and normalizes young people getting preventative treatments to «stay young,» but some argue it’s having the opposite effect — making 20-year-olds look 30. I’m one of those people who believe in aging gracefully.

    Fillers are frightening to me, but will I regret not getting them when I’m 50? I thought I’d ask artificial intelligence, with all that it can do — I’ve already used it to change my hair color, predict my future baby’s face and create headshots. Surely it can show me a realistic version of my aged face.

    A quick search for «old age face app» in the App Store led me to FaceApp, which has been around since way before AI was cool. The Cyprus-based FaceApp Technology launched its app in 2017, allowing you to transform your face with old and young filters.

    FaceApp is free, but it has feature limitations. For premium filters, no watermarks and faster processing, you can upgrade to FaceApp Pro for $10 per month, or $5 per month if you pay for the 12 months in full. There’s a one-week free trial available.

    I’m happy to pay $10 to save me a lifetime with wrinkles, but I started with the free version.

    Getting started with FaceApp AI

    I was in no state to take a selfie, so I chose a few photos from my camera roll. Given AI apps are usually picky with photo quality, I selected four to upload.

    Once I uploaded the images, the FaceApp watermark was instantly added to each one, given that I was on the free plan. The features were easy to find, with a simple banner of prompts to select from. I could change my face size, skin, expression, hair, gender and age.

    I clicked on Age and it had eight face prompts available, from young to teen to old. I picked «cool old» first to soften the blow. Baby steps.

    First impression? I’m wearing too much makeup. Oh, and I look like my grandma.

    Now onto the second.

    What this one nailed was the vertical line between my eyebrows and my crow’s feet. My dad has these lines and he’s 70. He’s also got a full head of hair, so it’s good to see my AI old age filter with fab hair.

    On to the third try.

    This one’s not bad at all.

    On to the lucky last.

    Aging with that hair? Not bad at all.

    FaceApp privacy concerns

    FaceApp reassures its users that it doesn’t use any of your photos or videos for any reason other than giving you the ability to edit them. While it uses Google Cloud and Amazon Web Services to process and edit photos and videos, your multimedia is only temporarily cached on those cloud services while they’re being edited and encrypted with a key stored locally on your own device.

    They remain in the cloud for 48 hours at most — meaning FaceApp and its third-party partners do not keep any of your photos or videos, either before or after they’ve been edited.

    AI advice on aging

    While it’s fun to see how AI predicts I’ll age, I wanted to take it further to get feedback on what I can do about it. Can ChatGPT tell me my problem areas and suggest a skin care regimen?

    I opened ChatGPT and uploaded the four old-age images from FaceApp with this prompt: «Here are four AI-generated old-age filter photos of me. This is how AI predicts I’ll age. Based on the visible aging in these photos, identify the problem areas and provide a personalized regimen that I can do now to avoid my skin aging to this extent. I don’t want generic advice.»

    ChatGPT gave me the standard skin care routine advice but did emphasize a vitamin C serum in the morning to brighten the skin and vitamin A in the evening.

    For preventive treatments, it suggested microneedling, laser therapy, chemical peels and Botox. I asked ChatGPT if I needed Botox or if good skin care would suffice.

    ChatGPT suggested I see how my skin responds to good skin care over the next two years. If dynamic lines deepen, it’s time for Botox. Ouch.

    Given that I’m nontox obsessed, I asked ChatGPT if there’s a natural alternative to Botox. It gave me some options such as facial acupuncture, natural wrinkle relaxers (bakuchiol, argireline and aloe vera), a collagen-rich diet and noninvasive treatments like microcurrent devices and LED light therapy.

    I asked what the most natural cosmetic procedures are, and I got this list:

    To summarize, ChatGPT suggested three top non-tox treatments based on my photos:

    The verdict on AI predicting how you’ll age

    It’s handy to be able to use AI to get a sense of how I’ll age, then put it into a chatbot to talk through preventive strategies. While AI image generators might be way off, it can help with the decisions I make now in how I care for my skin and hair — though you should definitely speak to a dermatologist before making any decisions.

    Maybe I just need to age with dignity and change my mindset, not my face. Hopefully by the time I’m 60, society will have caught up to the fact that there’s beauty to celebrate at every age.

    Recent Articles

    spot_img

    Related Stories

    Stay on op - Ge the daily news in your inbox