Why You Fell for the Fake Pope Coat

The Atlantic - Technology 

Being alive and on the internet in 2023 suddenly means seeing hyperrealistic images of famous people doing weird, funny, shocking, and possibly disturbing things that never actually happened. In just the past week, the AI art tool Midjourney rendered two separate convincing, photographlike images of celebrities that both went viral. Last week, it imagined Donald Trump's arrest and eventual escape from jail. Over the weekend, Pope Francis got his turn in Midjourney's maw when an AI-generated image of the pontiff wearing a stylish white puffy jacket blew up on Reddit and Twitter. But the fake Trump arrest and the pope's Balenciaga renderings have one meaningful difference: While most people were quick to disbelieve the images of Trump, the pope's puffer duped even the most discerning internet dwellers. This distinction clarifies how synthetic media--already treated as a fake-news bogeyman by some--will and won't shape our perceptions of reality.

Duplicate Docs Excel Report

Title
None found

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found