Jake Tapper alerted viewers on Show 6 of his attempts to impress in AI-generated videos… using a fake photo of himself.
“Bem-vindo de volta ao 'The Lead'. “My name is Jake Tapper,” the video read, which was later determined to be a deepfake. “We are in an unprecedented era, where high technology is far outpacing the public's ability to recognize deepfakes – and, moreover, outpacing lawmakers. Many of us, frankly, seem incapable of managing our own emails,” Vega said. For example, or you're helping now In fact, it's not Jake “Eu sou um Jake Deepfake – um Jake Deep, by Asim Dezer – was created by comedian Danny Polishchuk, who has only been using AI for a couple of weeks.”
“The fact that it looks so real suggests that this technology could cause real and serious harm if used in the United States as a means for harmful purposes abroad,” Deep Fake Jake continued.
Watch “Deep Fake Jake” in the video above.
Tapper mentioned several recent deepfakes, including an automatic link to voters in New Hampshire — supposedly from Joe Biden — to urge them no Vote in the Fiverrero elections. The man responsible for Biden's false call, Steve Cramer, has been indicted Criminal charges Among them are 13 counts of voter suppression, which is a crime. He also faced 13 charges of pretending to run or otherwise.
With support from CNN, he called in Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota to discuss a bill he is sponsoring with political rivals Josh Hawley and Susan Collins that would ban deepfakes.
“I note that some of these ads and videos that show people in inauthentic environments that are not satirical actually qualify as banned,” Klobuchar said. “This will make everything easier, because right now you won't be able to prevent this kind of behavior.” “Several platforms,” he added, including OpenAI, endossaram, or Project.
“(Political deepfakes) claim the prime minister’s political rhetoric, but these ads are fraudulent,” Klobuchar continued. They show people doing things they are not doing. If we don't have some new rules in place, they will soon dominate the Internet.
He predicts that we will see no more of them than before the presidential election. “You're starting to see this happen through videos and ads that are completely false. And now, we're going to report at the mercy of the platforms about putting up signs or taking them down, and at the mercy of the TV stations,” the senator said, adding that 18 states have never read against misleading political ads.