-
Russian ballet banned for 'gay propaganda' gets new life in Berlin
-
Strikes shake Tehran as Trump presses allies to help in Mideast war
-
Malaysia hit with 3-0 forfeits to send Vietnam to Asian Cup
-
Rescue workers comb ruins of Kabul drug clinic after Pakistan strike
-
'Many dead': Wounded survivor escaped Kabul clinic strike
-
Belgian court decides on holding trial over 1961 Congo leader murder
-
Kabul drug rehab clinic in ruins after Pakistan strikes on Afghanistan
-
Israel strikes Tehran, Beirut as Iraq pulled deeper into Mideast war
-
Georgia ready for rugby elite despite rare Portugal defeat
-
Doncic leads Lakers to sixth straight win, Spurs sink Clippers
-
Iran 'negotiating' with FIFA over moving World Cup games to Mexico: embassy
-
Gavaskar condemns Indian-owned franchise for signing Pakistan bowler
-
Cash handouts, fare hikes as Philippines battles soaring fuel costs
-
Alleged Bondi Beach killer's mother received death threats, court told
-
Venezuela end Italy fairytale to reach World Baseball Classic final
-
Sweden's prisons prepare to house young teens
-
Indonesia weighs response to price pressures from Middle East war
-
In Hollywood, AI's no match for creativity, say top executives
-
Sao Paulo AI policing nabs criminals, and a few innocents
-
Trump faces coalition of the unwilling on Iran
-
Nvidia chief expects revenue of $1 trillion through 2027
-
Nvidia making AI module for outer space
-
Migrant workers bear brunt of Iran attacks in Gulf
-
Former tennis world number 39 banned for doping
-
Kennedy Center board approves 2-year closure for renovation
-
US judge halts implementation of Trump vaccine overhaul
-
Afghanistan accuses Pakistan of deadly airstrike on drug rehab centre in Kabul
-
Iran footballers train with Australia club and say 'everything will be fine'
-
Trump asks China to delay Xi summit as Iran war rages
-
Multiple suicide bombers hit Nigeria's Maiduguri city after years of calm
-
Wolves fightback frustrates Brentford
-
Israel president says Europe should back fight against Hezbollah as troops operate in Lebanon
-
Israel president tells AFP Europe should back efforts to 'eradicate' Hezbollah
-
Equities rise on oil easing, with focus on Iran war and central banks
-
Mbappe set for Real Madrid return against Man City
-
Nvidia rides 'claw' craze with AI agent platform
-
Alleged narco trafficker makes first US court appearance
-
Neymar misses out as Endrick returns to Brazil squad
-
Afghanistan accuses Pakistan of killing civilians in Kabul strike
-
South Lebanon's Christian towns insist they are not part of Israel-Hezbollah war
-
Alleged narco trafficker Marset makes first US court appearance
-
Securing the Strait of Hormuz: Tactics and threats
-
Cuba hit by total blackout as US fuel blockade bites
-
'Buffy' reboot cancelled: Sarah Michelle Gellar
-
PSG will go for the kill against Chelsea: Dembele
-
Afghan govt accuses Pakistan after new strikes on Kabul
-
Chelsea huddle not meant to 'antagonise' says Rosenior
-
Talks towards international panel to tackle 'inequality emergency' begin at UN
-
Trump pushes for 'enthusiasm' from allies to secure Hormuz
-
US, China hold 'constructive' talks on trade, but Trump visit in doubt
Clickbait and 'AI slop' distort memory of Holocaust
An emaciated and apparently blind man stands in the snow at the Nazi concentration camp of Flossenbuerg: the image seems real at first but is part of a wave of AI-generated content about the Holocaust.
As the world marks International Holocaust Remembrance Day on Tuesday, experts warn that such content -- whether produced as clickbait for commercial gain, or for political motives -- threatens efforts to preserve the memory of Nazi crimes.
AFP's Fact Check team has noted a surge of such imagery on social networks, distorting the history of Nazi Germany's murder of six million European Jews during World War II.
Among the AI-generated images that have gone viral is one of a little girl with curly hair on a tricycle.
She is presented as Hannelore Kaufmann, a 13-year-old Berliner who purportedly died at the Auschwitz extermination camp, of which the 1945 liberation by Soviet troops is commemorated on Tuesday.
However, there is no record of her ever having existed.
Another example is a fake image created to illustrate the invented story of a Czech violinist called "Hank" at Auschwitz, which was called out as false by the camp museum.
After early examples emerged in the spring of 2025, by the end of the year "AI slop" on the subject "was being shown very frequently", historian Iris Groschek told AFP.
On some sites such content was posted once a minute, said Groschek, who works at memorial sites in Hamburg, including the Neuengamme concentration camp.
With the exponential advances in AI, "the phenomenon is growing," said Jens-Christian Wagner, director of the foundation that manages the Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora memorials.
- Exploiting 'emotional impact' -
Several Holocaust memorials and commemorative associations this month issued an open letter warning about the rising number of these "entirely fabricated" pieces of content.
Some of them are churned out by content farms which exploit "the emotional impact of the Holocaust to achieve maximum reach with minimal effort".
The picture supposedly from Flossenbuerg camp falls into this category, as it was shown on a page claiming to share "true, human stories from the darkest chapters of the past".
The memorials warned that fake content was also being created "specifically to dilute historical facts, shift victim and perpetrator roles, or spread revisionist narratives".
Wagner points for example to images of "well-fed prisoners, meant to suggest that conditions in concentration camps weren't really that bad".
The Frankfurt-based Anne Frank Educational Centre warned of a "flood" of AI-generated content and propaganda "in which the Holocaust is denied or trivialised, with its victims ridiculed".
By distorting history, AI-generated images have "very concrete consequences for how people perceive the Nazi era", says Groschek.
The results of trivialising or denying the Holocaust are in evidence in the attitudes of some younger visitors to the camps, particularly from "rural parts of eastern Germany... in which far-right thinking has become dominant", said Wagner.
- 'Confident, loud, aggressive' -
Staff have observed Hitler salutes as well as other provocative and disrespectful actions and comments.
Such behaviour is only "by a minority, but a minority that is increasingly confident, loud and aggressive", he told AFP.
In their open letter, the memorials called on social media platforms to "proactively combat AI content that distorts history" and to "exclude accounts that disseminate such content from all monetisation programmes".
"The challenge for society as a whole is to develop ethical and historically responsible standards for this technology," they said, adding: "Platform operators have a particular responsibility in this regard."
German Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer said in a statement to AFP: "I support the memorials' call to clearly label AI-generated images and remove them when necessary."
He said that making money from such imagery should be prevented.
"This is a matter of respect for the millions of people who were killed and persecuted under the Nazis' reign of terror," he said, reminding the platforms that they had "obligations" under the EU's Digital Services Act.
Groschek said that none of the American social media giants responded to the memorials' letter, including Meta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram.
TikTok responded by saying it wanted to exclude the accounts in question from monetisation and implement "automated verification", according to Groschek.
Some of the fake Facebook posts about Hannelore and Hank were still online on the eve of Holocaust Remembrance Day.
F.Wagner--VB