The video was made unavailable for viewing as it "could cause social disorder." In South Korea, a general election is coming up in April, and the committee said,
The government has expressed its intention to take decisive action against fake news. The video is titled ``President Yoon's Conscience Speech'' and has been circulating on social media since December last year. President Yun
The content of the speech that Ryo gave when he was a presidential candidate in 2022 has been edited by changing the order of the words. In the 46-second video, he said, ``The incompetent and corrupt Yun Seok-Yue administration has normalized privilege, foul play, injustice, and corruption.''
``I, Yun Seok-Yeol, collapsed the Republic of Korea and caused suffering for the people because of my unconventional ideology.'' The Korean newspaper Chosun Ilbo said, ``President Yoon's appearance and voice are visible in the video.
"However, experts believe that it is actually a deepfake video created using artificial intelligence (AI) from existing photos, videos, audio, etc. to look like the real thing."
Deepfake is a coined word that combines "deep learning" and "fake," and is a processing technology that uses AI (artificial intelligence) to artificially synthesize videos and audio of people.
Point. It was originally developed for the purpose of improving work efficiency in entertainment fields such as movie production, but recently there has been an increase in the number of cases where it has been misused due to its high definition.
It is becoming synonymous with video. In Japan, in November last year, a fake video that appeared to reproduce Prime Minister Fumio Kishida's voice went viral on social media. Logo and subtitles that resemble actual Nippon TV news programs
The content was designed to make it appear as if Prime Minister Kishida was saying obscene words. It appears that the voice and mouth movements were processed using generative AI. moreover
This month, a fake image was circulated on X (formerly Twitter) that appeared to show Prime Minister Kishida sitting in a fanny position with his legs crossed and being glared at by a senior U.S. government official. With senior U.S. government officials in April 2022
It is believed that the photograph taken during a meeting with Brazil's foreign minister was replaced with Prime Minister Kishida. On the 22nd, the Seoul National Police Agency Cyber Investigation Team issued a complaint against the creator and spreader of this video on the 6th of this month.
It was announced that the matter had been accepted and an investigation had begun. According to Chosun Ilbo, police believe that the video in question was mainly posted by one person. In addition, the police sent a letter to the Broadcasting and Communications Deliberation Committee.
requested that the video be blocked and deleted. On the 23rd, the committee determined that the video had a high possibility of causing confusion in society, and voted to disconnect the video.
In addition, the President's Office called the video a ``clearly false and fabricated video,'' and issued a firm statement regarding the video.
The company has announced plans to take action. Presidential Office Spokesperson Kim Soo-kyung expressed concern that some media outlets were reporting the video as ``nothing more than satire,'' adding, ``This is fake news.''
"It also goes against the mission of the media, which is to eradicate all forms of violence." There is also a version of the video that says, ``I tried to make it virtually,'' but Kim said, ``Even if it is labeled as virtual, there is no way to display it.
"Since the edited footage that has been deleted is being reproduced and enlarged online, it must be eradicated in light of the need to prevent the spread of false information." Furthermore, Mr. Kim
``With the general election coming up, I hope that all of us in society will work together to prevent falsehoods and fabrications from spreading and being reproduced.'' South Korea has a general election coming up in April, and the government and others are using fake news.
I'm nervous. In December of last year, South Korea's ruling and opposition parties passed and enacted a bill to revise the Public Offices Election Act, which completely bans election campaigns that exploit deepfakes from 90 days before the election. Chosun Ilbo
According to a report on the 20th based on interviews with the Central Election Commission, 129 illegal deepfake posts have already been uncovered ahead of the April general election. According to the article, potential opponents
It is said that most of the videos that appear have been skillfully manipulated to distort some of the statements, or false videos have been created from scratch and spread on social media.
2024/02/27 11:38 KST
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