After Rashmika, it's Taylor Swift's turn to face the demon of deepfake


- Social networks are getting ugly these days

- Occasional

- The press secretary of the White House has also said about Taylor Swift's deepfake image that the situation is alarming.

- Rashmika

- Taylor Swift

Last week, South actress Rashmika was caught in the whirlpool of deepfakes. His photos were digitally deep-faked to make them look like pornography. Now Hollywood singer Taylor Swift is also involved in deepfake technique. Social networks are getting ugly these days.

Social network villains who have the ability to blackmail people, trap gullible girls, defame their friends by leaking personal photos or information or ruin someone's rosy marriage have made the entire system dangerous. Social networks, a boon to friends and family-builders, have lost their credibility.

The system of social network is positive but its use has fallen into the hands of negative people. Some blackmailing incidents are such that people's marriages are on the verge of breakdown. Those who satisfy their desire by carrying on old relationships are using social networks. Such people don't understand the essence of relationships and then they start demanding their rights.

Taylor Swift's fans number in the millions. Everyone is worried about Taylor's harassment. Social media platforms are emerging in their favor. 45 million people viewed his deepfake image on microblogging site X.

By the time this post was removed from X, it had already received millions of likes. Taylor Swift AI then trended for two days.

Taylor Swift's millions of fans are called Swifties. Researching where such images come from revealed that a group on Telegram has a penchant for manipulating photos of women.

One of the tools that such negative people use is Microsoft's TaxU image generator. The tampering with Taylor Swift's image cannot actually be called a deepfake, because a deepfake is called fitting another person's photo on one body. Using AI to paste another photo on top of a pornographic model's photo to defame the viewer. Those who generate such images are called designers.

The press secretary of the White House has also expressed concern about the deepfake image of Taylor Swift and said that this situation is alarming. Social networks are wary of the deepfake monster. The companies that run the social network will have to voluntarily crack down on the creators of deepfakes before things get too far. Those who encourage such people should also be considered criminals. Swift Taylor's deepfake image in America has also worried the authorities.

Emani Naveen, a 24-year-old engineering graduate, created deep fake photos of Rashmika Mandana. When the Delhi Police interrogated him, it was found that he was running a video editing service etc.

His page had 90,000 followers. When he came to know that his father had fled the country, he deleted all the data. The creator of Rashmika's deepfake image has been caught in India. He admitted that he had shown the image with a touch of pornography to create his followers. Deep fakes are a concern for everyone. It is an insult to women.

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