Hello John and Doves,
This example shows us how good AI
is. And how dangerous it can be. Unless you know
what to look for, and even that can be tricky, or someone
tells you it's AI - it will be believable. "Seeing is
believing" - not any more!!
Here is Javier Milei, the new
president of Argentina, giving a speech at the Davos
meetings last week - this is the REAL Milei. He is not
speaking English - a translator is talking over him while he
is speaking:
He said: Do not be intimidated
by the political cost or by parasites who live off the
state. Do not yield to a political class that only
wants to stay in power and retain its privileges. You
are social benefactors. You are heroes. You are
the creators of the most extraordinary period of prosperity
we have ever experienced."
And here he is again - saying the
same thing BUT this is AI generated. And he's speaking
English with an accent in this video.
So we know that the 2nd video of Milei's
speech is not the real speech - because
he did not give the speech in English. But, if we
didn't know he didn't speak English at Davos, we wouldn't
know the 2nd video was AI generated. Unless someone
told us it was AI generated.
The 2nd video above was shown by Glenn Beck:
The way only way that people know that it's
AI is that Glenn just said that it was AI. And Glenn
knows it's AI because someone else reported that it was
AI.
"AI is getting better and
better at being undetectable. The industry is
working on watermarking and other solutions to identify
AI-generated images, though these do not include
anything that would be visible to the human eye.
But there are steps you can take to evaluate images and
increase the likelihood that you won't be fooled by a
robot....if a photo is circulating on social media, that
does not mean its legitimate. If you can't find it
on a respected news site and yet it seems
groundbreaking, then the chances are strong that it's
manufactured. Because artificial intelligence is
piecing together its creations from the original work of
others, it can show some inconsistencies close up...If
things seem too perfect to be real in an image, there's
a chance they aren't real...Getting closer to an image
can also reveal inconsistencies....Often, AI puts its
effect into creating the foreground of an image, leaving
the background blurry or indistinct. Scan the
blurry area to see whether there are any recognizable
outlines of signs that don't seem to contain any text or
topographical features that feel off."
How
to Detect AI-Generated Images | PCMag
Rewatching the AI generated
video after reading the above info, it's a bit easier to
detect that it is AI generated.
"Someone" can use AI to
generate a speech by a foreign leader, or a U.S.
President or the head of NATO to make a shocking
announcement. "Someone" can use AI to create a
picture of a natural disaster or mall shooting and pass
it off as 'this just happened' to create panic.
"Someone" can use AI to create a report of a news update
on a pandemic to get people to rush out and get the
"vaccine" or go into lockdown. "Someone" can use
AI to create a 'rapture' video with a UFO in the picture
and people being 'abducted'.
This technology can be very,
very manipulative and very, very dangerous. THEY
won't always tell us if it is AI generated.
We have so much deception
already - now this.
Just fyi.
Maranatha!
Chance