Is Trump kissing Fauci? With apparently fake photos, DeSantis raises AI
ante
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[June 09, 2023]
By Alexandra Ulmer and Anna Tong
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -In one apparently altered image, former U.S.
President Donald Trump is seen hugging his bête noire Dr. Anthony Fauci,
who beams in response. In another, Trump is kissing Fauci on the nose.
These images published by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis' campaign this
week demonstrate how the 2024 Republican White House contenders have
elevated their war of words into the AI-driven social media arena,
interspersing fact with fiction.
The pictures form part of a video that DeSantis' rapid response team
shared on Twitter. It criticizes Trump for not firing Fauci, the former
top U.S. infectious disease official whose push for COVID-19
restrictions turned him into a boogeyman for many conservatives.
The video includes apparently real footage of Trump at press conferences
and interviews. But at the 25-second mark, six images appear of Trump
and Fauci - including three showing them hugging or kissing.
Those three images are likely AI-generated, according to an analysis of
traces left by synthetic image generators, said Matthew Stamm, a
professor of electrical and computer engineering at Drexel University.
"Our results consistently output a decision that these images are fake,"
he said.
The video does not disclose any potential AI use and the DeSantis
campaign did not respond to a question about whether the images were
fake or whether AI was used to create them.
But their appearance in the campaign of a leading candidate shows how
the technology is turbocharging its way into the 2024 presidential race
as a slew of new "generative AI" tools make it cheap and easy to create
convincing deepfakes.
"It was particularly sneaky to intermix the real and the fake images, as
if the presence of the real image is giving more credibility to the
other images," said digital image forensics pioneer Hany Farid, who
teaches at the University of California, Berkeley.
A person with knowledge of the DeSantis campaign operation said the
Trump side had been "continuously posting fake images and false talking
points to smear the governor."
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Republican presidential candidate and
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks at a campaign event at the
Derry-Salem Elks Lodge in Salem, New Hampshire, U.S., June 1, 2023.
REUTERS/Brian Snyder
Trump, who is currently the frontrunner for the Republican
presidential nomination, has indeed used altered images to attack
DeSantis, his closest rival.
However, he seems to have primarily shared obviously fake content,
for instance an image of DeSantis riding a rhinoceros, a suggestion
that the governor is a "Republican in Name Only" (RINO).
The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for
comment. His team on Thursday evening tweeted that the pro-DeSantis
camp is "pretending to not know the difference between memes and the
deceitful fake images in the DeSanctimonious ad," using one of
Trump's nicknames for his rival.
A representative for Dr. Fauci did not immediately respond either.
Drexel professor Stamm's forensics analysis tool suggests the images
were made using an AI model called a diffusion model, which underpin
popular AI image generation products like DALL-E and Stability AI.
So far, the only high-profile AI-generated political ad in the U.S.
was one published by the Republican National Committee in late
April. The 30-second ad, which the RNC disclosed as being entirely
generated by AI, used fake images to suggest a cataclysmic scenario
should Biden be reelected, with China invading Taiwan and San
Francisco being shut down due to crime.
No one is certain where the generative AI road leads or how to
effectively guard against its power for mass misinformation,
especially as AI improves in quality.
"At some point the AI systems will be outputting images that have no
differences from real images," said James O'Brien, a professor of
computer science at the University of California, Berkeley. "At that
point there will be nothing to detect."
(Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer and Anna Tong in San Francisco;
Additional reporting by Seana Davis; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien and
Stephen Coates)
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