-
Title rivals Djokovic and Sinner advance at Wimbledon
-
Record-equalling Djokovic powers into Wimbledon last 16
-
Ferrari confirm Hamilton staying next year
-
Ruthless Sinner powers into Wimbledon last 16
-
Global frenzy over Swift, Kelce's glittering 'royal wedding'
-
England's Kane feels 'as good as ever' ahead of Mexico World Cup clash
-
Three acquitted of 2019 murder of N.Irish journalist Lyra McKee
-
French Top 14 champions Toulouse fined for salary breaches
-
Stokes bids farewell to fans after 'mad 15 years'
-
Thousands more head for South Africa's borders
-
One for the history books: what we know about the European heatwave
-
Australia upbeat about 'ultimate professional' Perry's fitness for World Cup final
-
Dutch FA to sue over racist slurs after World Cup exit
-
Ukraine backers to vow major support at NATO summit
-
Mercedes demos set stage for wave of German auto protests
-
Ayuso happy to fly under radar at Tour de France
-
Iran leaders pay last respects to Khamenei as mourners gather
-
Curran ready to fill England gap left by Stokes exit
-
UN issues 'red alert' over 'catastrophe' in Sudan's El-Obeid
-
Djokovic has history on the line at Wimbledon
-
Tour de France to start with team time-trial 'bang'
-
Hamilton sparkles in Silverstone sunshine
-
Dressed for success: Osaka reaches Wimbledon last 16 for first time
-
Swift and Kelce set to tie the knot in glitzy arena extravaganza
-
Bayern sign Germany defender Brown until 2031
-
Police hunt for Ukrainian woman over Monaco bomb attack
-
MEXC's June Highlights: $437 Billion in Trading Volume, Offering Access to 7,000+ US Stocks and ETFs
-
Kenya's abortion taboo is killing thousands of women
-
Stocks mostly rise as beaten-down tech stocks enjoy bounce
-
Madonna returns to form with dancefloor filler "Confessions II"
-
Iranian leaders pay respects to supreme leader as Tehran prepares for funeral
-
Dean says Australia final a 'fresh start' for England
-
Doubles not a 'carnival sideshow' say players amid schedule row
-
Wimbledon giving Serena 'as much time' as possible for doubles
-
Klopp in 'talks' for Germany job after Nagelsmann exit: federation
-
Chinese investors flock to Hong Kong as trading curbs tighten
-
Surging real estate development divides opinion on Athens' riviera
-
Projected 'super typhoon' heads for US Pacific islands
-
Move over, Messi! Robot footballers thrill crowds in South Korea
-
UN warns of strong looming El Nino
-
France deaths rose by 30% during heatwave
-
Hunt for last signs of life in Venezuela quake zone
-
Drones spot sharks 73 times in two days off Sydney beaches
-
Asian markets rise as beaten-down tech stocks enjoy bounce
-
Supreme leader's body arrives at Tehran religious complex for funeral
-
David v Goliath as Cape Verde face Messi's Argentina at World Cup
-
Mbappe's French juggernaut face Paraguay, eye World Cup quarter-finals
-
Nagelsmann quits as Germany coach after World Cup exit: reports
-
Wallabies riding wave of patriotic support against Ireland
-
All Blacks return to Christchurch 'a blessing', says Savea
Meta says generative AI deception held in check -- for now
Social media giant Meta says its bid to thwart coordinated disinformation campaigns created through ever-improving generative AI is working, despite widespread concerns.
Meta's latest study on "coordinated inauthentic behavior" on its platforms comes as fears mount that generative AI will be used to trick or confuse people in upcoming elections worldwide, notably in the United States.
"What we've seen so far is that our industry's existing defenses, including our focus on behavior rather than content in countering adversarial threats, already apply and appear to be effective," said David Agranovich, Meta's threat disruption policy director, in a press briefing Wednesday.
"We're not seeing generative AI being used in terribly sophisticated ways, but we know that these networks are going to keep evolving their tactics as this technology changes."
Facebook has been accused for years of being used as a powerful platform for election disinformation.
Russian operatives used Facebook and other US-based social media to stir political tensions in the 2016 election won by Donald Trump. The European Union is currently investigating Meta's Facebook and Instagram over alleged failure to counter disinformation ahead of June EU elections.
But experts now also fear an unprecedented deluge of disinformation from bad actors on Meta apps because of the ease of using generative AI tools such as ChatGPT or the Dall-E image generator to make content on demand and in seconds.
Meta said it had seen "threat actors" put AI to work to create bogus photos, videos, and text, but no realistic imagery of politicians, according to the report.
Generative AI has been used to make profile pictures for false accounts in Meta's family of apps, and a deception network from China apparently used the technology to create posters for a fictitious pro-Sikh activist movement called Operation K, the report indicated.
Meanwhile, an Israel-based network posted what appeared to be AI-generated comments about Middle Eastern politics on Facebook pages of media organizations and public figures, Meta reported.
Comparing them to spam, Meta said those comments, some of which were on pages of US lawmakers, were criticized in responses posted by real users, who called them propaganda.
Meta attributed the campaign to a Tel Aviv-based political marketing firm.
"This is an exciting space to watch," said Mike Dvilyanski, Meta's head of threat investigations. "So far, we haven't seen a disruptive use of generative AI tooling by adversaries."
The report also showed that efforts by a Russia-linked group called "Doppelganger" to use Meta apps to undermine support for Ukraine persisted but are being thwarted on the platform.
"Doppelganger has taken it to a new level over the last 20 months while remaining crude and largely ineffective in building authentic audiences on social media," according to Meta.
Meta also removed small clusters of inauthentic Facebook and Instagram accounts that originated in China and aimed at the Sikh community in Australia, Canada, India, Pakistan, and other countries, the report showed.
Posts at those fake accounts called for pro-Sikh protests.
P.Staeheli--VB