1.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]Chinese state-aligned actors are using AI-generated deepfake news broadcasters to peddle pro-China propaganda videos for social media platforms, a new research report claims.[/responsivevoice]
2.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]The fake anchors – for a fictitious news outlet called Wolf News – were created by artificial intelligence software and appeared in footage on social media that seemed to promote the interests of the Chinese Communist Party, US-based research firm Graphika said in its report.[/responsivevoice]
3.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]“This is the first time we’ve seen a state-aligned operation use AI-generated video footage of a fictitious person to create deceptive political content,” Jack Stubbs, vice president of intelligence at Graphika, told AFP.[/responsivevoice]

[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]Let’s consider the possibilities of this technology, strictly from the perspective of profitability. What uses could it have?[/responsivevoice]
4.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]In one video analysed by Graphika, a fictitious male anchor who calls himself Alex critiques US inaction over gun violence plaguing the country. In the second, a female anchor stresses the importance of “great power cooperation” between China and the United States.[/responsivevoice]
5.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]Advancements in AI have stoked global alarm over the technology’s potential for disinformation and misuse, with deepfake images created out of thin air and people shown mouthing things they never said.[/responsivevoice]
6.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]Last year, Facebook owner Meta said it took down a deepfake video of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urging citizens to lay down their weapons and surrender to Russia. There was no immediate comment from China on Graphika’s report, which comes just weeks after Beijing adopted expansive rules to regulate deepfakes.[/responsivevoice]
7.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]China enforced new rules last month that will require businesses offering deepfake services to obtain the real identities of their users. They also require deepfake content to be appropriately tagged to avoid “any confusion”.[/responsivevoice]
8.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]The Chinese government has warned that deepfakes present a “danger to national security and social stability”. Graphika’s report said the two Wolf News anchors were almost certainly created using technology provided by the London-based AI start-up Synthesia.[/responsivevoice]
9.[responsivevoice voice = “US English Female” buttontext = “”]The website of Synthesia, which did not immediately respond to AFP’s request for comment, advertises software for creating deepfake avatars “based on video footage of real actors”. Graphika said it discovered the deepfakes on platforms including Twitter, Facebook and YouTube while tracking pro-China disinformation operations known as “spamouflage“.[/responsivevoice]
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