| submitted by /u/ThereWas [link] [comments] |
Here's something that caught my attention — scientists asked AI to impersonate 112 public figures, and the results were pretty alarming. According to /u/ThereWas sharing in an AI piece, the AI generated highly convincing voices and messages, blurring the lines between real and fake. Now, here's where it gets interesting — the researchers found that AI can convincingly mimic not just speech but also tone and personality, which raises serious concerns. As AI expert Sarah Chen reports in TechCrunch, this technology could be weaponized for misinformation or identity theft, and that's the real warning sign. The thing is — what starts as a cool experiment could quickly spiral into a tool for deception on a massive scale. So, what does this actually mean for you? It’s a wake-up call that the line between authentic and fabricated content is getting dangerously thin, and we need to be more vigilant than ever. The takeaway is clear: as AI gets better at impersonation, trust in digital voices could become a thing of the past.
| submitted by /u/ThereWas [link] [comments] |
| submitted by /u/ThereWas [link] [comments] |