Published on [Permalink]

🔗 Is A.I. generated audio good for anything? (Besides shitposts):

The funny thing is, while fraud, slander, and reputation destruction may be the main practical uses for voice-cloning software, it’s not even clear that it’s actually all that good for those activities? Not only was the athletics director arrested and charged, but local Baltimore media twigged early on that the audio was likely A.I.-generated. Similarly, both scams Bethea covers ultimately failed, since the targets were able to simply call the supposed kidnapping victims on the phone and confirm that they were not kidnapped. It’s easy enough to read these stories and extrapolate out a future where even more sophisticated and frictionless voice-cloning technology creates an endless parade of unstoppable scams and scandals. But a much more likely, if no less dystopian, future is one in which amateurish and avoidable frauds and scams and campaigns continue forever while we never address the problem collectively at all, and instead individually develop a set of organic defense mechanisms against flood of obvious A.I.-generated audio hoaxes, the way everyone I know now declines to pick up the phone when they receive a call from an unknown number.

✍️ Reply by email

✴️ Also on Micro.blog

omg.social greenfield.social another weblog yet another weblog