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Taylor Swift deepfakes on X falsely depict her engaging in election denialism — and have been viewed millions of times

Taylor Swift deepfakes on X falsely depict her engaging in election denialism — and have been viewed millions of times::Taylor Swift is being targeted again by deepfakes, with supporters of Donald Trump posting manipulated media falsely showing her supporting Trump.

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  • The first Swift deepfakes I heard (currently the only ones) are the mathematical proofs (like this one on YouTube).

    Hopefully, enough Swifties encounter them and are able to learn not just some sweet math, but that we have tech good enough to render anyone saying anything. Also that Deepfake Taylor has pretty solid math chops.

    Then we get back to square one, where the authority or celebrity of a person is not enough to take their position as truth, but we also have to consider the merits of what argument they make.

    For now, though, the Taylor Swift math proofs might serve to defuse Taylor Swift PSAs that might lead people astray.

    ETA: Einstein adds a PSA to the end of this proof advising that yeah, we can't rely on who is saying something as informing its veracity. (Fixed!)

  • This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Deepfakes are real media that is manipulated, often with the help of artificial intelligence, that tends to target celebrities and high-profile women in particular.

    A representative for X wrote “The team was made aware of this AI-generated video and we took action on almost 100 posts on February 4, 2024, under our Synthetic and Manipulated Media policy.

    The X account that the manipulated media appeared to originate from has also posted numerous other deepfakes on X, some also involving Swift.

    A post on Monday contained an edited video of Swift’s album of the year acceptance speech at the Grammys, which appeared to use voice-cloning technology to make it sound as though she was saying “Trump won,” “F--- Joe Biden” and “Trump 2024 bit----, let’s go.” That post has over 750,000 views, according to X’s metrics, and it did not contain a manipulated media label or a community note indicating it is fake until after NBC News reached out to X for comment on Wednesday.

    A search for “Taylor Swift Trump” on Instagram surfaced one post containing the video and no content labels or indications that it was fake.

    The social media platforms that NBC News found hosting the fake Swift videos without content warnings have all struggled to moderate disinformation — AI-generated and otherwise.


    The original article contains 868 words, the summary contains 214 words. Saved 75%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!

34 comments