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by pradn 1568 days ago
If Disney can't make Luke Skywalker, one of their most iconic characters, look good in a show with a budget the size of the Mandalorian, I can't say I'm too worried for this technology yet.

Everyday misinformation techniques are far more pernicious - out-of-context sound bites, selective coverage, framing in an uncharitable way, interviewing non-experts, etc etc.

3 comments

>If Disney can't make Luke Skywalker, one of their most iconic characters, look good in a show with a budget the size of the Mandalorian

and yet are willing to put it out there that means actually they see this technology as important, it's the future for them, and what do you do when you think a technology is the future, that's right you invest time and money in using it so that you can improve it. It's not that they have the budget of the Mandalorian to do this scene, it's that they have the budge of Disney to improve the technology.

I would say in 10 years Disney in a show with a budget the size of the Mandalorian (adjusted for inflation natch) will probably have something really worrisome.

I see you haven’t watched The Book of Boba Fett. I can assure you the deepfake technology is now… fully operational.

Everyday misinformation techniques were already really bad, but things could stand to get a lot worse.

Yeah the improvement in young Luke in The Book of Boba Fett was pretty impressive.
Agreed! That was the first one I've seen where I felt it was basically "passing". Like if I didn't know, I wouldn't know.
Yeah, it doesn’t seem like people believe misinformation because the evidence for it is just so convincing. I see people link to sources (if they even bother doing that), with completely false descriptions of what it shows. It doesn’t matter; as long as the description is the kind of thing that outrages people they’ll amplify it. Corrections will get one tenth of the attention.