Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-09-13 16:30:04| Engadget

Starting next week, Meta will no longer put an easy-to-see label on Facebook images that were edited using AI tools, and it will make it much harder to determine if they appear in their original state or had been doctored. To be clear, the company will still add a note to AI-edited images, but you'll have to tap on the three-dot menu at the upper right corner of a Facebook post and then scroll down to find "AI Info" among the many other options. Only then will you see the note saying that the content in the post may have been modified with AI.  Images generated using AI tools, however, will still be marked with an "AI Info" label that can be seen right on the post. Clicking on it will show a note that will say whether it's been labeled because of industry-shared signals or because somebody self-disclosed that it was an AI-generated image. Meta started applying AI-generated content labels to a broader range of videos, audio and images earlier this year. But after widespread complaints from photographers that the company was flagging even non-AI-generated content by mistake, Meta changed the "Made with AI" label wording into "AI Info" by July. The social network said it worked with companies across the industry to improve its labeling process and that it's making these changes to "better reflect the extent of AI used in content." Still, doctored images are being widely used these days to spread misinformation, and this development could make it trickier to identify false news, which typically pop up more during election season. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/social-media/meta-hides-warning-labels-for-ai-edited-images-143004313.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

13.03OpenAI reportedly plans to add Sora video generation to ChatGPT
13.03Meta is bringing more international news to its AI
13.03Adobe agrees to pay settlement for making its subscriptions hard to cancel
13.03Nothing updates its AI app with semantic search and a new way to track events
13.03The MacBook Neo is Apple's most repairable laptop
13.03Meta is killing end-to-end encryption in Instagram DMs
13.03You'll now have to fork out for an additional subscription if you want to watch 4K content on Prime Video
13.03Parallels Desktop creators say MacBook Neo does indeed have enough muscle to run Windows apps
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

14.03Iran war fuel price hikes 'put our firm at risk'
14.03Housing market squeeze: The income needed to purchase a typical U.S. home is up 79% since 2020
14.03The ultimate entertainment budget hack: Your local library
14.03Mutual funds reduce investments in IT stocks in February, weight slips to 8 year low
14.03Smallcaps cheaper but not cheap yet: Sonam Srivastava urges selective investing
14.03Londoners 'disproportionately' affected by fraud
14.034 MacBook Neo productivity apps you need to try right now
14.03This is the smart printing system Google Calendar is missing
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .