Singer speaks out! Images of Taylor Swift in the stadium go viral: Couldn’t believe my eyes

Fake images of Taylor Swift generated using artificial intelligence are circulating on social media.

The images in question — known as “deepfakes” — show Swift in various positions at a Kansas City Chiefs game, a nod to her highly publicized romance with the team’s tight end Travis Kelce.

It wasn’t immediately clear who created the images or first shared them to X, though as of Thursday morning, “Taylor Swift AI” was trending on the platform, with more than 58,000 posts on the topic.

Swifties came together and tried to bury the images by sharing an influx of positive posts about the 34-year-old songstress.

Finney: Confessions of a middle-aged Taylor Swift fan

“We are talking about the body/face of a woman being used for something she probably would never allow/feel comfortable how are there no regulations laws preventing this.”

“When i saw the taylor swift AI pictures, i couldn’t believe my eyes. Those AI pictures are disgusting,” another said.

Other outraged Swift fans called whoever created them “disgusting” and said instances like these “ruin the [AI] technology.”

Swifties came together and tried to bury the images by sharing an influx of positive posts about the 34-year-old songstress.

Swift’s publicist, Tree Paine, did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment.

President Biden signed an executive order to further regulate AI in October that prevents “generative AI from producing non-consensual intimate imagery of real individuals,” among other things, including further oversight of the tech’s use in developing biological materials.

Celebrity Gossip & News | 100 Sexy Taylor Swift Pics That Will Convert Just About Anyone Into a Swiftie | POPSUGAR Celebrity UK Photo 92

The order also demands that the federal government issue guidance “to watermark or otherwise label output from generative AI.”

The “Preventing Deepfakes of Intimate Images Act” was referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary, but the committee has yet to make a decision on whether to pass the bill.

In an example of how convincing this technology can be, several Swift fans were reportedly scammed out of hundreds of dollars earlier this month after tricksters released advertisements employing AI-generated video of the Grammy winner peddling Le Creuset in an attempt to steal money and data from fans.

The ads — which can be found across all social media platforms — show Swift, 34, standing next to the Le Creuset Dutch oven, which, according to the official website, runs anywhere from $180 to $750 depending on the size and style.

 

 

Related Posts

Our Privacy policy

https://mortoday.com - © 2024 News