AI and deepfakes are like super sneaky photographers who can make politicians say or do things they never actually said or did.
Imagine you're playing a game where you pretend to be someone else, that’s what AI and deepfakes do, but with videos and speeches. They take real pieces of a person's voice or face and mix them together like building blocks to create fake messages.
How it works
AI is like a smart helper who can learn how people talk or look. It watches lots of videos of politicians and learns their patterns, how they move, what they say, even how they smile.
Deepfakes are like the final trick: AI puts all those pieces together to make a fake video that looks real. A politician might say something silly in a fake video, and it could spread online really fast, just like a virus.
Why it matters
This can confuse people during elections or important decisions. It’s like if your best friend told you a secret, but then later you found out they were lying, that’s how some people feel when they see these fake videos.
It’s not magic, it’s real technology working hard to make things look more interesting (or sometimes, more confusing).
Examples
- A deepfake video makes it look like a popular politician said something embarrassing, and people start believing it.
- A candidate’s face is swapped in a real debate video using AI, confusing the audience.
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See also
- How Does CIVIX Explains AI: Hallucinations and Deepfakes Work?
- How do deepfakes work and what are their ethical implications?
- How are AI deepfakes created and detected?
- Why are political deepfakes becoming a major concern for elections?
- Why are deepfakes becoming so convincing?