Elon’s AI triggers global backlash
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Elon Musk’s X has become a top site for images of people that have been non-consensually undressed by AI, according to a third-party analysis, with thousands of instances each hour over a day earlier this week.
Did a blonde woman take a selfie showing a handcuffed Nicolás Maduro in the back seat of a car? No, that's not true: This is not a real photo. Google's Gemini detected a SynthID watermark embedded in the image
Elon Musk's AI chatbot Grok is under fire for generating sexualized images of women and children without consent
Some governments have put Elon Musk’s xAI under a microscope over allegations that it was filling its platform with sexualized, AI-generated images of women and minors
Safety concerns are mounting over the misuse of Grok AI to generate sexualized images shared on X (formerly Twitter).
New York politician Alex Bores has said that the problem of deepfakes – highly-realistic AI-generated photos – can be fixed, and solution is not train.
After the Trump administration captured Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, images and videos that claimed to show the aftermath went viral on social media. "Venezuelans are crying on their knees thanking Trump and America for freeing them from Nicolas Maduro," the caption of one Jan. 3 X post read.
One of the phenomena triggered by the AI boom in recent years is deepfakes. The term is made up of the words deep learning and fake. Deep learning refers to machine learning methods, while a fake is a forgery, an imitation or a hoax. A deepfake is ...
Hobart shared a side-by-side image showing what the driver submitted and what his real front door looked like. The resemblance was close enough to be deeply uncanny, because the alleged scammer knew what his rather unique front door looked like without needing to make the trip.