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AI godfather warns of child abuse deepfakes

Deepfakes are a growing threat to society

(Web Desk) - A pioneer of artificial intelligence has warned of the growing dangers of deepfake technology for creating child sexual abuse imagery.

Yoshua Bengio, often referred to as an ‘AI godfather’, joined other leading figures within the industry in signing an open letter calling for more regulation to protect against such threats.

Deepfakes have become increasingly realistic in recent years, capable of using AI to generate voices, images and videos that are convincing enough to trick people into thinking they are real.

“Deepfakes are a growing threat to society, and governments must impose obligations throughout the supply chain to stop the proliferation of deepfakes,” the open letter read.

“AI-generated pornography is a rapidly growing industry, and many targets are minors... The whole deepfake supply chain should be held accountable, just as they are for malware and child pornography.”

The signatories called for new laws to be introduced, including fully criminalising “deepfake child pornography, even when only fictional children are depicted”.

The letter, titled ‘Disrupting the deepfake supply chain’, also warned of the potential for AI deepfakes to perpetrate fraud, influence elections, and cause “mass confusion”.

Penalties for using deepfakes in these ways should also apply to software developers who allow their technology to be misused.

More than 750 people have signed the open letter since it was published online on Wednesday, 21 February, including academics, politicians, and researchers at leading AI firms like Google Deepmind and OpenAI.

It is not the first time prominent figures within the AI space have used an open letter to warn of the threat the technology poses.

Last year, artificial intelligence experts pledged their support to a statement from the Centre for AI Safety that claimed advanced artificial intelligence poses an existential threat to society.

Signatories included DeepMind and OpenAI chief executives Demis Hassabis and Sam Altman, as well as senior executives from Google, Skype and the AI firm Anthropic.

“Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war,” the statement read.

A separate open letter from the Future of Life Institute in 2023 went even further by calling on AI companies to pause development on their systems in order to work on ways to mitigate the risks.

 

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