LONDON (AP) — AI fakery is quickly becoming one of the biggest problems confronting us online. Deceptive pictures, videos and audio are proliferating as a result of the rise and misuse of generative artificial intelligence tools.
With AI deepfakes cropping up almost every day, depicting everyone from Taylor Swift to Donald Trump, it’s getting harder to tell what’s real from what’s not. Video and image generators like DALL-E, Midjourney and OpenAI’s Sora make it easy for people without any technical skills to create deepfakes — just type a request and the system spits it out.
These fake images might seem harmless. But they can be used to carry out scams and identity theft or propaganda and election manipulation.
Here is how to avoid being duped by deepfakes:
In the early days of deepfakes, the technology was far from perfect and often left telltale signs of manipulation. Fact-checkers have pointed out images with obvious errors, like hands with six fingers or eyeglasses that have differently shaped lenses.
Related articles:
Related suggestion:
Vegas, US tour and more signings: Wrexham has plenty of fun and work ahead after latest promotionRussia says proof show link between Moscow attack terrorists, UkraineVegas, US tour and more signings: Wrexham has plenty of fun and work ahead after latest promotionA technicolor twist on Yu the GreatIsraeli airstrikes in S. Lebanon kill Hezbollah fighter, injure 2 civiliansBodies of foreign aid workers transferred to Egypt from GazaSingapore PM Lee to step down on May 15 and hand power to his deputyHighlights of Chinese government work reportUN suspends nightChina's Heilongjiang launches JSQ freight train from Harbin to Europe
3.2835s , 6497.296875 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by One Tech Tip: How to spot AI ,Global Grid news portal