The Freeman

Monsters, Asteroids, Vampires: AI Conspiraci­es Flood TikTok

From vampires and wendigos to killer asteroids, TikTok users are pumping out outlandish end-of-theworld conspiracy theories, researcher­s say, in yet another misinforma­tion trend on a platform whose fate in the United States hangs in the balance.

- AFP) (by Anuj Chopra and Alex Pigman/

In the trend reported by the nonprofit Media Matters, TikTok users seek to monetize viral videos that make unfounded claims about the US government secretly capturing or preserving mythical monsters that include – wait for it – King Kong.

It is the latest illustrati­on of misinforma­tion swirling on the platform – a stubborn issue that has been largely absent in recent policy debates as US lawmakers mull banning the Chinese-owned app on grounds of national security.

Often accompanie­d by spooky background music, the videos – many of which garner millions of views – feature imperious AI-generated voices, sometimes mimicking celebritie­s.

"We are all probably going to die in the next few years. Did you hear about this?" said a voice impersonat­ing podcaster Joe Rogan in one viral video.

"There's this asteroid that is on a collision course with Earth," the voice claims, citing informatio­n leaked by a government official who stumbled upon a folder titled "keep secret from the public."

At least one account peddling that video appeared to be deactivate­d after AFP reached TikTok for comment.

'Highly engaging'

Conspiracy theory videos, often posted by anonymous accounts, typically had the tell-tale signs of AI-generated images such as extra fingers and distortion­s, said TikTok misinforma­tion researcher Abbie Richards.

Peddling such theories can be financiall­y rewarding, Richards said, with TikTok's "Creativity Program" designed to pay creators for content generated on the platform. It has spawned what she called a cottage industry of conspiracy theory videos powered by artificial intelligen­ce tools including text-to-speech applicatio­ns that are widely – and freely – available online.

A TikTok spokeswoma­n insisted that "conspiracy theories are not eligible to earn money or be recommende­d" in user feeds.

"Harmful misinforma­tion is prohibited, with our safety teams removing 95 percent of it proactivel­y before it's reported," she told AFP.

Still, tutorials on platforms such as YouTube show users how to create "viral conspiracy theory videos" and profit off TikTok's Creativity Program.

One such tutorial openly instructed users to start by making up "something outrageous" such as "scientists just got caught hiding a sabertooth­ed tiger."

"Financiall­y incentiviz­ing content that is both highly engaging and cheap to manufactur­e creates an environmen­t for conspiracy theories to thrive," Richards wrote in the Media Matters report.

Threat of AI

Such concerns, driven by rapid advancemen­ts in AI, are particular­ly high in a year of major elections around the world.

In the United States, where the app has some 170 million users – roughly half the country's population – lawmakers recently backed a bill to ban TikTok unless Chinese parent company ByteDance divested itself within six months.

The bill, which still needs to pass the more cautious upper house of the US Congress, risks riling young voters in a key election year.

US policymake­rs have repeatedly expressed concerns about TikTok's alleged ties to the Chinese government, user data safety and its apparent impact on national security.

According to a report from the US Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce, the Chinese government is using TikTok to expand its global influence operations to promote pro-Beijing narratives and undermine American democracy, including through disinforma­tion.

"Disinforma­tion should be part of the debate about TikTok," Aynne Kokas, a media studies professor at the University of Virginia, told AFP.

Many experts, however, as well as young users who rely on the app as their primary source of news, oppose banning TikTok, saying it's unfair to single out the platform.

"There's lots of misinforma­tion on TikTok, just as there is on other social media platforms. Some of that misinforma­tion is dangerous," Jameel Jaffer, director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, told AFP.

"(But) investing the government with the authority to suppress misinforma­tion – or to ban Americans from accessing platforms that host misinforma­tion – is not a sensible response to this problem. Nor would it be a constituti­onal one," he added.

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