November 23, 2024

Taylor Daily Press

Complete News World

Trump has been arrested – the footage proves it

Trump has been arrested – the footage proves it

in the mediaImage is Sophia Twigg

Donald J. Did you see Trump’s arrest? Those pictures! An army of NYPD officers assaulted and handcuffed him, and the former president almost fell to the ground. Subsequently, the journalists were able to enter the prison. Trump played basketball with his new friends in his orange uniform — unforgettable.

‘It’s indistinguishable from the real thing, isn’t it?’ said my photographer Hilary on Twitter last week when the pictures were released. We drove together through Silicon Valley, the capital of the American tech world. Photos then around the world. Trump wasn’t arrested, of course: the photos were taken with the help of artificial intelligence.

In Hillary Apart from the dangers of this new technology, app groups with photojournalists are not speaking out. Photographers are concerned, and not just because they make money with their images. After all, they know better than anyone that tinkered with images in a polarized society risk creating their own realities.

Americans have so many conspiracies thrown at them all day — on television, in the supermarket, on social media — that it’s becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish between the real and the fake. Artificial intelligence is now giving wings to that problem. And many others share their concerns.

“You’re looking at an image,” Shirin Anlan, who works at an NGO dealing with images and human rights, told the BBC news channel. People don’t see much difference in news photos of fake arrests than they do in real news photos. “Once you see something, you can’t destroy it.” The images persist.

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A fake photo of Donald Trump being arrested is circulating on Twitter.  Image Twitter

A fake photo of Donald Trump being arrested is circulating on Twitter.Image Twitter

Experts warn that the photos herald a new era in the spread of misinformation. The technology is so advanced that the photos appear to be distributed by news agencies. Only if you look closely can you see three legs in one of the photos of Trump being arrested.

Spicy The Trump photos were taken by Eliot Higgins, founder of Bellingate, a journalism group. He did so after Trump announced his arrest. “It’s not my intention to do an intelligent critique or anything like that,” he told Buzzfeed last week. Higgins explained in a Twitter thread that fifty of the photos were fake. Some photos look like the real thing, others – three legs! – Just unbelievable, and funny.

But, as it goes, they are shared by many without explanation or explanation. One such post on Instagram has received 79 thousand likes.

“America has the best information technology in the world,” Israeli historian Yuval Noah Harari writes with two colleagues on Monday. The New York Times, “Americans still can’t agree on who wins the election.” If we don’t address the risks of artificial intelligence, the software will be misused by people hungry for power and money. “If we wait for confusion, it will soon be too late to fix it.” He and his co-authors recommend that all world leaders start talking about the risks—to master AI, before AI becomes our master.

“Do you believe Biden is real?” In countless conversations with Americans, I notice how powerful conspiracy thinking is. ZIt is In a good conversation with a Democrat or Republican about something as important as inflation, I suddenly have a question like this: ‘Do you think the president really exists? I think he’s a clone of someone who died.’ Then what should be the answer? Especially if that person quickly grabs AI-generated news photos from a phone of two Joe Bidens: one alive and one dead.

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