Lawyers brace for AI's potential to upend court cases with phony evidence
"Gutfeld!" panelists weigh in on the rise of video and audio clips made using artificial intelligence tools to mimic the voice and the likeness of anyone you want. Images generated by artificial intelligence are becoming more convincing and prevalent, and they could lead to more complicated court cases if the synthetic media is submitted as evidence, legal experts say. "Deepfakes" often involve editing videos or photos of people to make them look like someone else by using deep-learning AI. The technology broadly hit the public's radar in 2017 after a Reddit user posted realistic-looking pornography of celebrities to the platform. The pornography was revealed to be doctored, but the revolutionary tech has only become more realistic and easier to make in the years since.
May-11-2023, 06:00:00 GMT
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