![]() ![]() ![]() That's what Drake and The Weeknd's label, Universal Music Group, has invoked to get the song impersonating their voices pulled from streaming platforms. Texas and California have laws barring deepfakes targeting candidates for office.Ĭopyright law is also an option in some cases. Ten states already ban some kinds of deepfakes, mainly pornography. "It's going to be, probably, nonconsensual deepfake pornography or deepfakes of election candidates or state election workers in very specific contexts," he said. Laws and regulation will have to play a role, at least in some of the highest-risk areas, said Matthew Ferraro, an attorney at WilmerHale and an expert in legal issues around AI. That's why those working on AI policy and safety say a mix of responses are needed. Open source AI models may not include watermarks. Detectors don't catch everything, and must constantly be updated as AI technology advances. There's not yet a universal standard for identifying real or fake content. ![]() ![]() "Was it created by human? Was it created by a computer? When was it created? Where was it created?"īut all of these technical responses have shortcomings. The goal is to let people easily "identify what type of content this is," said Jeff McGregor, CEO of Truepic, a company working on digital content verification. Music Grimes invites fans to make songs with an AI-generated version of her voice ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |