• Dogyote@slrpnk.net
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    5 hours ago

    Simetimes I think the future will resemble the pre-internet era. AI content will be so easy to create that the zone will be flooded with shit, and only a few reputable sources will be trusted, like when there were only a few TV news channels.

  • Rossphorus@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Video evidence is relatively easy to fix, you just need camera ICs to cryptographically sign their outputs. If the image/video is tampered with (or even re-encoded) the signature won’t match. As the private key is (hopefully!) stored securely in the hardware IC taking the photo/video, any generated images or videos can’t be signed by such a private key.

    • topherclay@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      So whatever way the camera output is being signed, what’s stopping you from signing an altered video with a similar private key and then saying “you can all trust that my video is real because I have the private key for it.”

      The doubters will have to concede that the video did indeed come from you because it pairs with your key, but why would anyone trust that the key came from the camera step instead of coming from the editing step?

      • Taleya@aussie.zone
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        7 hours ago

        Mate, digital cinema uses this encryption /decryption method for KDMs.

        The keys are tied into multiple physical hardware ids, many of which (such as player/.projector ) are also married cryptographically. Any deviation along a massive chain and you get no content.

        Those playback keys are produced from DKDMs that are insanely tightly controlled. The DKDM production itself even more so.

        And that’s just to play a movie. This is proven tech, decades old. You’re not gonna break it with premiere.

        • tweeks@feddit.nl
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          47 minutes ago

          But how would one simple member of the audience easily determine if this whole chain of events is valid, when they don’t even get how it works or what to look out for?

          You’d have to have a public key of trusted sources that people automatically check with their browser, but all the steps in between need to be trusted too. I can imagine it is too much of a hassle for most.

          But then again, that has always been the case for most.

      • Rossphorus@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        You, the end user, don’t have access to your camera’s private key. Only the camera IC does. When your phone / SD card first receives the image/video it’s already been signed by the hardware.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        You can enter the camera as evidence, and prove that it has been used for other footage. Each camera should have a unique key to be effective.

        So if you create a new key, it won’t match the one on am existing camera. If you steal the key, then once that’s discovered, the camera should generate a new one.

        • tweeks@feddit.nl
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          45 minutes ago

          But if you don’t actually check the physical camera and prove that key for yourself, then it can easily be faked by generating a key that is not coming from the camera and is used for the “proof” video and the fake video.

  • Seth Taylor@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    Actually, polls show that most people are not fond of AI-generated content and want it to be labelled or don’t want it at all.

    As for generating your own entertainment at home, see interactive movies. They did not take off because people don’t want to be “working” for their entertainment. That’s their time to relax and not make decisions.

    All in all, we’re not as careless as it may seem.

    • Taleya@aussie.zone
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      7 hours ago

      A fb group i moderate recently had an AI jammed up it. I ran a poll to keep or disable. “Get rid of it” got more votes than the option “Put a gimp mask on it and whore it out for grapefruit”

    • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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      15 hours ago

      Not to mention those interactive movies from the early 90s games that also didn’t take off because they were sorely lacking in the game department

  • ᕙ(⇀‸↼‶)ᕗ@lemm.ee
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    21 hours ago

    email. gmail already summarizes every mail by default in the US. most emails are bot spam. ppl start using ai bots to answer emails. is that the internet of things?

  • elvis_depresley@sh.itjust.works
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    22 hours ago

    Part of the fun of watching stuff isn’t because it “customised to me” it’s sharing an experience with the creator(s) and friends, family etc.

    I see genAI being used as a tool for creators but not as an automation of content creation.

    • rtxn@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      AI would be chronically incapable of implementing actually surprising plot twists that are both unexpected and consistent with the rest of the plot (and not somehow someone back into existence). If it hadn’t been written before, an AI would never make Darth Vader be Luke’s father unless specifically prompted, at which point, why even.

      (I’ve just finished a hexalogy marathon, my head is full of jedi.)

  • Nailbar@sopuli.xyz
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    22 hours ago

    I wonder if personal websites with links to each other, like in the olden days, will start growing in popularity again because of how trust is slowly eroded for anything not in your direct control, and search engines becoming more and more useless 🤔

  • IndiBrony@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    I think this vastly overestimates the average person’s ability to recognise it even care to recognise what is a bit and what is not.

    You’ve got all those videos on Facebook which are BLATANTLY AI and the comment section is split between “wow, amazing!” and “it’s AI you fucking morons”

    The latter will eventually leave the platform and the former will be all that’s left.

    • Fizz@lemmy.nz
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      18 hours ago

      Then new people will grow up in an environment where its only the wow amazing people and they never hear from the its ai you moron people.

      • IndiBrony@lemmy.world
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        17 hours ago

        We’re a dying breed. There are people alive today who will never know anything other than the post truth world.

        Interesting times.