| No, this really hasn't always been the case. At least not in the sense it is today. 20 years ago your misinformation came from television, radio, and print. All of those things were expensive to produce and there was an implicit need for them to be at least vaguely believable and reliable, because their existence depended on it to continually generate revenue. - Today, a single person produce 100% AI-generated media for basically the cost of their time. - That media is as high quality as anything else out there. - Social media platforms provide the delivery system for free. - There's no real way to tell if there's even a real person behind the name/pseudonym used for posting it. It might be a person, it might be an algorithm, it might be a nation-state. You have no way to know. Coincidentally, this is at the top of HN right now:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48355751 It's more about using LLMs to impersonate someone, but the point stands. |
That's not about technology but is a fundamental moral issue.