The Day

Katy Perry says own mom fooled by AI images of her

- By ANNABELLE TIMSIT

Some of the biggest stars in music, film and fashion walked the Met Gala’s red (or, in this case, green) carpet this year.

One star who wasn’t there? Katy Perry. And yet, after the event got underway, the pop star says she received a confusing text from her mom.

“Didn’t know you went to the Met,” Perry’s mom said, according to a screenshot of the message posted by the star on Instagram. “What a gorgeous gown, you look like the Rose Parade, you are your own float lol.” In the screenshot, the text included a photo of what appeared to show Perry in a dramatic flower-trimmed gown, surrounded by photograph­ers.

Except the photo wasn’t real: It was one of several fake images appearing to show stars at the Met that were probably generated by artificial intelligen­ce and spread widely on social media — a scenario that has prompted past warnings from experts about the risks of using technology to manipulate imagery.

Perry’s mom, Mary Hudson, was not the only one who apparently fell for the trick. One post that shared the fake image of Perry was viewed 16.6 million times on X, prompting users to add a context label using the platform’s “community notes” function — and highlighti­ng a major challenge of AI-generated images: It’s quick and easy for fake or manipulate­d photos to spread online, and much slower to fact-check and add warnings to them.

“lol mom the AI got you too, BEWARE!” Perry wrote to her mother, according to her screenshot on Instagram.

Nor was Perry the only celebrity with fake images circulatin­g after the Met Gala: A fake image of Rihanna attending, dressed in a treeshaped gown covered in vines, flowers and birds, also made the rounds late Monday and early Tuesday — even though the singer and entreprene­ur wasn’t at the event, reportedly because she was sick with the flu. Manipulate­d images of Selena Gomez were also shared online, though the actress also didn’t attend.

Perry wrote on Instagram she “couldn’t make it to the MET” because she “had to work.” In her post, she included two of the widely shared AI-generated images that falsely appeared to show her at this year’s event. Representa­tives of the pop star did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment about the images.

Fake or manipulate­d photos, videos and even audio are an increasing­ly common phenomenon, particular­ly around big events that capture the internet’s attention.

The images can appear harmless: Last year, for example, a fake photo of Pope Francis in a puffy white coat labeled as being from the brand Balenciaga didn’t do much more than prompt many to praise the religious leader’s apparently modern style — but the ease with which people fell for it highlighte­d the risks of content that appears just real enough to confuse, mislead or convince us of something that didn’t actually take place.

Experts say the proliferat­ion of false or distorted imagery can promote misinforma­tion, and in more sinister cases, allow for scams, blackmail, identity theft and the manipulati­on of current events.

Some low-quality AI-generated images are easy to spot — for example, by examining elements that seem off, such as a person with an extra finger, or an artificial sheen on people’s skins, or by looking at the context. One of the fake photos of Perry at the Met Gala appeared to feature the carpet from the 2018 gala, not this year’s distinctiv­e greenish carpet.

But Perry’s comment that her own mother fell for the fake image highlights just how much the technology has improved, and how easy it is to be taken in.

 ?? ?? A view of Katy Perry’s Instagram account, showing an AI-generated image of the singer at the Met Gala.
A view of Katy Perry’s Instagram account, showing an AI-generated image of the singer at the Met Gala.

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