In the wake of explicit deepfakes of pop singer Taylor Swift appearing on social media, education experts are urging parents to speak to their children about cyberbullying and ways to handle AI-generated images, videos and audio recordings. A fast-growing number of AI tools can be used to alter material to make it look or sound like a specific person and create a piece of content known as a deepfake. Only a free app and a couple of taps are needed to put someone's face in a whole new setting. Th
Taylor Swift is not the first celebrity to be targeted by AI technology, which has advanced rapidly. Last year, people were fooled by deepfake photos of Pope Francis. The pop icon is mulling legal action.
A group of researchers at MIT have developed a special tool that can tell when some media has been altered using AI systems, also known as deepfakes. Check how it works.
Sony has successfully concluded a month-long field test of its in-camera authenticity technology. Sony has successfully concluded a month-long field test of its in-camera authenticity technology to combat the rise of manipulated imagery.