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Deepfake tech and art: Kendrick Lamar video with deep fake Kanye and Will Smith

25 points| mychaelangelo | 3 years ago |gq-magazine.co.uk

9 comments

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nh23423fefe|3 years ago

The old fear of deepfakes was that "people wont be able to tell real from fake." That initial fear seems to have subsided and the new fear is "AI will allow malicious actors to manufacture so much believable content that truth as a concept will evaporate."

I think such a situation is impossible and almost even nonsensical. Reality itself is full of human agents lying, obscuring and misleading about their own internal processes. How could an organism like ourselves be "misled" by artifacts produced by devious beings?

It just seems to imagine that humans can be short-circuited by some malicious input and never adapt or change. It seems to me we have been bombarded by malicious inputs for 10000 generations, why are these new inputs so dangerous?

pontus|3 years ago

Because of scale? Tech is an insane force multiplier. Instead of deceiving ~100 people by talking to them face-to-face you can now deceive ~10k, 100k, maybe millions. The cost is also so low to allow pretty much anyone to engage in this behavior.

tsol|3 years ago

Because it's in a manner that humans aren't used to. People lie, but they can't literally put lies directly in people's mouths. Just look at the election in the Phillipines, it's clear people aren't adapting. Or look at the last election in America-- the idea that people will adapt is not holding up

formerkrogemp|3 years ago

There are a lot of gullible persons. A lot of them use social media. Posting things is easy. Imagine a video telling people the cure to a worldwide virus is injecting bleach while also peddling conspiracies about the FDA .

elpakal|3 years ago

Damn this is pretty cool. Kobe