A Telegram user who advertises their services on Twitter will create an AI-generated pornographic image of anyone in the world for as little as $10 if users send them pictures of that person. Like many other Telegram communities and users producing nonconsensual AI-generated sexual images, this user creates fake nude images of celebrities, including images of minors in swimsuits, but is particularly notable because it plainly and openly shows one of the most severe harms of generative AI tools: easily creating nonconsensual pornography of ordinary people.

  • @CeeBee
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    -138 months ago

    FR is not generative AI, and people need to stop crying about FR being the boogieman. The harm that FR can potentially cause has been covered and surpassed by other forms of monitoring, primarily smartphone and online tracking.

    • @BleatingZombie
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      208 months ago

      I wholeheartedly disagree on it being surpassed

      If someone doesn’t have a phone and doesn’t go online then they can still be tracked by facial recognition. Someone who has never agreed to any Terms and Conditions can still be tracked by facial recognition

      I don’t think there’s anything as dubious as facial recognition due to its ability to track almost anyone regardless of involvement with technology

      • @neatchee
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        -28 months ago

        You don’t need to be online or use a digital device to be tracked by your metadata. Your credit card purchases, phone calls, vehicle license plate, and more can all be correlated.

        Additionally, saying “just don’t use a phone” is no different than saying “just wear a mask outside your house”. Both are impractical, if not functionally impossible, in modern society

        I’m not arguing which is “worse”, only speaking to the reality we live in

        • @BleatingZombie
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          8 months ago

          I am arguing which is worse. There are people in Palestine who don’t have the internet, don’t have a phone, and don’t have a credit card. How are they being tracked without facial recognition?

          I also didn’t say don’t use a phone. I don’t know where you got that

          • @neatchee
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            8 months ago

            I know what you’re arguing and why you’re arguing it and I’m not arguing against you.

            I’m simply adding what I consider to be important context

            And again, the things I listed specifically are far from the only ways to track people. Shit, we can identify people using only the interference their bodies create in a wifi signal, or their gait. There are a million ways to piece together enough details to fingerprint someone. Facial recognition doesn’t have a monopoly on that bit of horror

            FR is the buzzword boogieman of choice, and the one you are most aware of because people who make money from your clicks and views have shoved it in front of your face. But go ahead and tell me about what the “real threat” is 👍👍👍

            • @BleatingZombie
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              48 months ago

              I didn’t say “real threat” either. I’m not sure where you’re getting these things I’m not saying

              I think facial recognition isn’t as much of a “buzzword” as much as it is just the most prevalent issue that affects the most people. Yes there are other ways to track people, but none that allow you to easily track everybody regardless of their involvement with modern technology other than facial recognition

              (Just to be clear I’m not downvoting you)

              • @neatchee
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                8 months ago

                That’s why I put “real threat” in quotes ; I was paraphrasing what I consider to be the excessive focus on FR

                I’m a security professional. FR is not the easiest way to track everybody/anybody. It’s just the most visible and easily grok’d by the general public because it’s been in movies and TV forever

                To whit, FR itself isn’t what makes it “easy”, but rather the massive corpus of freely available data for training combined with the willingness of various entities to share resources (e.g. Sharing surveillance video with law enforcement).

                What’s “easiest” entirely depends on the context, and usually it’s not FR. If I’m trying to identify the source of a particular set of communications, FR is mostly useless (unless I get lucky and identify, like, the mailbox they’re using or something silly like that). I’m much more interested in voice identification, fingerprinting, geolocation, etc in that scenario

                Again, FR is just…known. And visible. And observable in its use for nefarious purposes by shitty governments and such.

                It’s the stuff you don’t see on the news or in the movies that you should really be worried about

                (and I’m not downvoting you either; that’s for when things don’t contribute, or deserve to be less visible because of disinformation; not for when you disagree with someone)