AI-generated news videos are increasingly populating social media platforms, mimicking real journalism's visual style and delivery. These synthetic newscasts can mislead viewers by borrowing journalistic aesthetics but often serve to provoke outrage or manipulate opinions. Experts highlight that, in a fast-scrolling environment, it becomes difficult for viewers to differentiate between genuine news and fabricated content. This raises significant concerns about the potential to blur the lines between fact and fiction, with real-world implications for public perception and discourse.
If you're scrolling fast on social media, it looks like news. It sounds like news, and that's the danger.
Synthetic videos blur the line between satire and reality, often designed to provoke outrage, manipulate opinion, or simply go viral.
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