Jeffries slams Trump’s's AI Video
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OpenAI's New Social Media App Will Be All AI Videos
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Tilly Norwood wants to be “the next Scarlett Johansson or Natalie Portman.” Hollywood is prepared to fight back
As the US government barrels toward a shutdown, President Donald Trump shared a racist video on social media, which appears to be AI-generated, depicting House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries wearing a sombrero and a mustache and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaking in a fake voice.
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People Are Using Zuckerberg’s AI to Post Videos of Senior Citizens Falling to Their Death
There are dozens of variations on this theme, usually showing an elderly woman smashing a glass bridge with a large rock.
Experts say a disturbing trend of the use of AI to create child sexual abuse material is becoming more common as technologies develop.Zach Lowe, an Effingham County father, says he and his wife post pictures of their two daughters on social media to keep up with family and friends.
Ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo dropped an AI-generated campaign ad depicting him painfully trying his hand at different jobs, including an MTA subway driver, a window washer and a stockbroker. In the
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Why Did Melania Trump Share an AI Body-Double Video?: 4 Theories.
On Wednesday, Melania Trump posted a seemingly AI-generated video of herself materializing from a digital ether, then blinking twice as the wind gently blows through her hair in some Trump Tower–like setting. What does that mean? No one really knows! But as a professional Melania watcher, I do have a few theories.
Super Typhoon Ragasa swept through the Philippines, Taiwan and southern China in late September, killing more than two dozen people across the region and leaving a trail of destruction in its wake. Yet images claimed online to show buildings and public transport being wrapped in plastic and secured to the ground to prepare for the storm are AI-generated -- their creator confirmed to AFP that they are not real photos.
Many people still think of AI-generated speech as sounding "fake" or unconvincing and easily told apart from human voices. But new research from Queen Mary University of London shows that AI voice technology has now reached a stage where it can create "voice clones" or deepfakes which sound just as realistic as human recordings.