"More" is dramatically understating it. The new platforms (GPT4, Midjourney, etc.) are able to automate the propaganda output of literally millions of people.
If you wanted someone to Photoshop the pope into multiple new outfits and fool a lot of people, you used to need at least a few hours of an expert's time. Now you can do it almost instantly.
It's many orders of magnitude faster to create highly realistic lies than it used to be.
> but there are also more ways to get information so its harder to suppress true info.
There are the same ways to get information, and they're going to be: A) unverifiable, and B) drowned out by propaganda.
Let's say someone wants to take down Joe Biden, and they generate text, audio, video, and photos of him molesting a child. Millions of people would want to believe it and then believe it. How would we prove it's not real? How could we, other than finding the person who did it or exposing a digital trail?
I questioned the Dalai Llama story as a possible CCP deep fake. Considering what they already did with doctored photos of Australian soldiers a year or so back.
"More" is dramatically understating it. The new platforms (GPT4, Midjourney, etc.) are able to automate the propaganda output of literally millions of people.
If you wanted someone to Photoshop the pope into multiple new outfits and fool a lot of people, you used to need at least a few hours of an expert's time. Now you can do it almost instantly.
It's many orders of magnitude faster to create highly realistic lies than it used to be.
> but there are also more ways to get information so its harder to suppress true info.
There are the same ways to get information, and they're going to be: A) unverifiable, and B) drowned out by propaganda.
Let's say someone wants to take down Joe Biden, and they generate text, audio, video, and photos of him molesting a child. Millions of people would want to believe it and then believe it. How would we prove it's not real? How could we, other than finding the person who did it or exposing a digital trail?