Morning Sun

Trump arrested? Putin jailed? Fake AI images spread online

- By Arijeta Lajka and Philip Marcelo

Former President Donald Trump getting gang-tackled by riot-gear-clad New York City police officers. Russian President Vladimir Putin in prison grays behind the bars of a dimly lit concrete cell.

The highly detailed, sensationa­l images have inundated Twitter and other platforms in recent days, amid news that Trump faces possible criminal charges and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court has issued an arrest warrant for Putin.

But neither visual is remotely real. The images — and scores of variations littering social media — were produced using increasing­ly sophistica­ted and widely accessible image generators powered by artificial intelligen­ce.

Misinforma­tion experts warn the images are harbingers of a new reality: waves of fake photos and videos flooding social media after major news events and further muddying fact and fiction at crucial times for society.

“It does add noise during crisis events. It also increases the cynicism level,” said Jevin West, a professor at the University of Washington in Seattle who focuses on the spread of misinforma­tion. “You start to lose trust in the system and the informatio­n that you are getting.”

While the ability to manipulate photos and create fake images isn’t new, AI image generator tools by Midjourney, DALL-E and others are easier to use. They can quickly generate realistic images — complete with detailed background­s — on a mass scale with little more than a simple text prompt from users.

Some of the recent images have been driven by this month’s release of a new version of Midjourney’s text-to-image synthesis model, which can, among other things, now produce convincing images mimicking the style of news agency photos.

In one widely-circulatin­g Twitter thread, Eliot Higgins, founder of Bellingcat, a Netherland­s-based investigat­ive journalism collective, used the latest version of the tool to

conjure up scores of dramatic images of Trump’s fictional arrest.

The visuals, which have been shared and liked tens of thousands of times, showed a crowd of uniformed officers grabbing the Republican billionair­e and violently pulling him down onto the pavement.

Higgins, who was also behind a set of images of Putin being arrested, put on trial and then imprisoned, says he posted the images with no ill intent. He even stated clearly in his Twitter thread that the images were Ai-generated.

Still, the images were enough to get him locked out of the Midjourney server, according to Higgins. The San Francisco-based independen­t research lab didn’t respond to emails seeking comment.

“The Trump arrest image was really just casually showing both how good and bad Midjourney was at rendering real scenes,” Higgins wrote in an email. “The images started to form a sort of narrative as I plugged in prompts to Midjourney, so I strung them along into a narrative, and decided to finish off the story.”

He pointed out the images are far

from perfect: in some, Trump is seen, oddly, wearing a police utility belt. In others, faces and hands are clearly distorted.

But it’s not enough that users like Higgins clearly state in their posts that the images are Ai-generated and solely for entertainm­ent, says Shirin Anlen, media technologi­st at Witness, a New York-based human rights organizati­on that focuses on visual evidence.

Too often, the visuals are quickly reshared by others without that crucial context, she said. Indeed, an Instagram post sharing some of Higgins’ images of Trump as if they were genuine garnered more than 79,000 likes.

“You’re just seeing an image, and once you see something, you cannot unsee it,” Anlen said.

In another recent example, social media users shared a synthetic image supposedly capturing Putin kneeling and kissing the hand of Chinese leader Xi Jinping. The image, which circulated as the Russian president welcomed Xi to the Kremlin this week, quickly became a crude meme.

 ?? J. DAVID AKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Images created by Eliot Higgins with the use of artificial intelligen­ce show a fictitious skirmish with Donald Trump and New York City police officers posted on Higgins’ Twitter account, as photograph­ed on an iphone in Arlington, Va., Thursday, March 23, 2023. The highly detailed, sensationa­l images, which are not real, were produced using a sophistica­ted and widely accessible image generator.
J. DAVID AKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Images created by Eliot Higgins with the use of artificial intelligen­ce show a fictitious skirmish with Donald Trump and New York City police officers posted on Higgins’ Twitter account, as photograph­ed on an iphone in Arlington, Va., Thursday, March 23, 2023. The highly detailed, sensationa­l images, which are not real, were produced using a sophistica­ted and widely accessible image generator.

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