š§ Ā OpenAI CEO Sam Altman issued a serious warning: in the near future, we could face a wave of fraud caused by the rapid development of neural networks.
According to Altman, artificial intelligence is already capable of realistically copying a personās face, facial expressions, and voice. This means scammers will soon be able to create incredibly convincing fakes – deepfake videos, voice messages, and even full conversations that are almost indistinguishable from real ones.
What does this mean in practice?
- Someone could ācallā pretending to be a relative and ask for money.
- Fake videos featuring public figures or politicians could be created.
- Banks, employers, or government agencies could be deceived.
Altman calls this not just a risk but a coming crisis of trust. People will stop believing what they see and hear – creating a serious challenge for society, media, legal systems, and security technology.
He also emphasized the need to develop verification tools and digital āwatermarksā for AI-generated content, so that synthetic media can be properly identified.
š”ļø Bottom line:
Neural networks open up incredible opportunities – and equally significant threats. What once seemed like science fiction is now knocking on our phones and inboxes. The real question is: are we ready for it?
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