AI deepfakes are fake videos or pictures that look super real, even though they're made by a computer.
Imagine you have a toy robot that can copy your voice and face perfectly. It can say anything, like "I love ice cream" or "I'm going to the moon." Now imagine this robot is used by someone to trick others into thinking you said something silly or did something wild. That's what AI deepfakes do, they make fake videos that look just like real people.
How Deepfakes Work
Deepfakes use a special kind of computer learning called neural networks. It’s like teaching your robot by showing it lots of pictures and videos of the person you want to copy. The more examples, the better it gets at pretending to be that person.
Why People Are Worried
People are worried because deepfakes can be used to trick others in big ways, like making someone look like they said something untrue or did something embarrassing. It’s like if your robot made a video of you saying "I ate all the cookies" when you didn’t even touch them! This could cause confusion, hurt feelings, or even make people believe fake news.
Deepfakes are becoming easier to make and share, just like how drawing with crayons becomes faster once you know the tricks. So they're a growing concern for everyone who uses videos and pictures online.
Examples
- Someone in a meeting sees their boss giving a speech they didn’t write
- A child sees a cartoon character talking to them on the TV
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See also
- How do AI deepfakes threaten trust and information?
- How do AI deepfakes threaten trust in digital media?
- How do deepfakes work and what are their societal implications?
- How do deepfakes create realistic fake videos and audio?
- How do deepfake videos trick us into believing false images?