Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • Is the weight-loss drug boom moving past the Ozempic era?
    • Market Talk – May 6, 2026
    • The GLP-1 paradox study: Here’s what people really think about your Ozempic weight loss
    • Italy’s prime minister outsmarted AI abusers by posting a surprising image
    • ‘He put me in harm’s way’: Ken Griffin responds to Mamdani’s viral video of his $239 million NYC penthouse
    • How a Texas vegan cheese-maker used Claude and Manus to fight back against a big shipping company
    • This driverless Chinese mining truck is giant, agile, and shows the industrial future of AI
    • The Gospel of Hegseth | The Nation
    Populist Bulletin
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Populist Bulletin
    Home»Business»Italy’s prime minister outsmarted AI abusers by posting a surprising image
    Business 5 Mins Read

    Italy’s prime minister outsmarted AI abusers by posting a surprising image

    Business 5 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Yesterday, Giorgia Meloni posted to X an AI-generated photo of herself wearing only lingerie. The Italian prime minister published the image to warn others about how easy it is to create perfectly believable images and videos. Her warning: Never believe anything you see without thoroughly fact-checking it.

    After all, we live in the end of reality.

    “Deepfakes are a dangerous tool, because they can deceive, manipulate, and hit anyone,” Meloni said on X. “I can defend myself. Many others don’t.”

    She is right, even though the image is not technically a deepfake. (It’s a fully AI-generated photo that features her face.) Unlike deepfakes, which just switch the face of a human in a base source photo with the face of another human, generative AI can use different components—like real faces, bodies, places, voices, and sounds—to create a 100% new synthetic media.

    This process makes its true nature virtually, if not completely, undetectable: Since you can’t reverse search and match the base image to an original source on the web, you can believe it is original (and real).

    [Screenshot: Twitter/X]

    Meloni has already sued two men for creating a deep fake porn video of her back in 2024. This time around, she joked that the fakes look “a lot” better than herself and posted the image as a very 2026 PSA. “This is why a rule should always apply: Check before believing, and believe before sharing. Because today it happens to me, tomorrow it can happen to anyone,” she wrote.

    Meloni showed courage by putting herself out there, more must be done than doling out advice. We are way past the point of education. The world needs action.

    Generative AI poses an existential danger to humanity. It can weaponize our psychological biases, effectively destroying our shared sense of objective reality.

    Just look at the last few month. There’s Jessica Foster, an AI-generated, pro-Trump military influencer who amassed a million followers in just three months to funnel men toward an adult fetish site (her account was later deleted from Instagram). And even though her digital persona was riddled with obvious rendering glitches and absurd scenarios, unlike Meloni’s images, her followers willfully ignored them because the mirage perfectly satisfied their ideological fantasies.

    When a legitimate video was released proving that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was alive following assassination rumors, the internet—aided by hallucinating AI chatbots—instantly and falsely dismissed the footage as a deepfake. Even after independent analysts and fact-checkers provided irrefutable proof that the video was authentic, the evidence failed to sway those who preferred their own conspiracy theories.

    Every politician must act now

    Trapped in this unreal dystopia where the perimeter of objective truth has been completely vaporized by tech giants, society needs more than an X post. Public awareness and educational campaigns are no longer sufficient to combat the huge human and economical cost that this is already causing.

    The only remaining exit strategy to save our shared reality is for global governments to aggressively intervene and force technology companies to adopt hardware and software that can authenticate real photos, videos, and audio beyond any shadow of a doubt. 

    In March, a team at ETH Zurich proposed the only solution that feels serious enough for the scale of the threat: sensors that cryptographically sign an image at the exact moment light and audio hits them.

    Unlike today’s systems, which stamp authenticity later through the device’s main processor and can therefore be intercepted or tricked, this design locks verification directly into the act of capture itself.

    In plain terms, it would make it vastly harder to pass off synthetic media as real, because the proof of authenticity would be born inside the hardware, not added afterward by software that can be spoofed. That way, people can look for the ‘stamp of truth’ in any media published everywhere, from publications to social networks.

    And anything without that stamp, like Meloni says, should be automatically doubted and disregarded.

    States must also act to give tools to their citizens to take down any image that uses their faces, by enabling laws like the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in the U.S. But rather than forcing regular people to copyright themselves, they should be able to  easily take down any unauthorized AI versions of themselves in any public web or social network.

    Right now, only the Danish government has done this. In an effort to offer protection against AI cloning to its citizens, last year the country rewrote its legal code to guarantee that residents strictly own the rights to their biological faces and natural speaking voices.

    Danish Culture Minister Jakob Engel-Schmidt summed it up perfectly back then: “Human beings can be run through the digital copy machine and be misused for all sorts of purposes and I’m not willing to accept that.”

    The Meloni case, one of millions, shows once again that the Danish culture minister is 200% right when he declared the urgency of the law his government passed. We need to stop this problem decisively with those tools, and any other that lawmakers and engineers can come up with.

    Fake images—as long as they are within existing legal limits—can coexist with reality just fine. But the tech giants profiting off of this problem have to act now.





    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    Is the weight-loss drug boom moving past the Ozempic era?

    May 6, 2026

    The GLP-1 paradox study: Here’s what people really think about your Ozempic weight loss

    May 6, 2026

    ‘He put me in harm’s way’: Ken Griffin responds to Mamdani’s viral video of his $239 million NYC penthouse

    May 6, 2026
    Top News
    Business 5 Mins Read

    Retail sales rose slightly in September as Americans pulled back on spending

    Business 5 Mins Read

    Sales at U.S. retailers and restaurants increased modestly in September as resilient consumers moderated their spending after…

    What even is a ‘low-hire, low-fire’ environment?

    February 11, 2026

    What Are Order Fulfillment Centers and How Do They Work?

    September 8, 2025

    Twisting in the Wind | The Nation

    March 20, 2026
    Top Trending
    Business 3 Mins Read

    Is the weight-loss drug boom moving past the Ozempic era?

    Business 3 Mins Read

    Sales are booming for Novo Nordisk’s new weight-loss pill.  In its first…

    Economy 3 Mins Read

    Market Talk – May 6, 2026

    Economy 3 Mins Read

    ASIA: The major Asian stock markets had a green day today: •…

    Business 2 Mins Read

    The GLP-1 paradox study: Here’s what people really think about your Ozempic weight loss

    Business 2 Mins Read

    Weight loss culture in America is nothing new: Our collective obsession with…

    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    About us

    The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, government accountability, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

    We are devoted to delivering straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the majority of the American public, while boldly challenging false mainstream narratives that seem to only serve entrenched elitists, and foreign interests.

    Top Picks

    Is the weight-loss drug boom moving past the Ozempic era?

    May 6, 2026

    Market Talk – May 6, 2026

    May 6, 2026

    The GLP-1 paradox study: Here’s what people really think about your Ozempic weight loss

    May 6, 2026
    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.