- By Ashish Singh
- Wed, 08 May 2024 01:43 PM (IST)
- Source:Reuters
OpenAI has finally brought a new tool which will let the users know if the content is AI-generated or not. This comes after concerns are growing about the deepfake content amid the upcoming elections. The new tool will be able to identify the photos which are created by the text-to-image generator, DALL-E 3.
Internal testing revealed that the programme correctly identified images taken by DALL-E 3 around 98% of the time. It can also tolerate common changes like compression, cropping, and saturation adjustments with little to no effect.
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The ChatGPT developer also wants to integrate tamper-resistant watermarking, which will be used to mark digital data such as audio or photographs with a difficult-to-remove signal.
A standard that would aid in tracing the provenance of various media has been planned by OpenAI, which has also joined an industry organisation that consists of Google, Microsoft, and Adobe as part of its efforts.
Fake movies of two Bollywood actors criticising Prime Minister Narendra Modi went viral online in April amid the ongoing general election in India.
Deepfakes and AI-generated content are being used more and more in elections across the globe, including those in Indonesia, Pakistan, and the United States, as well as in India.
In an effort to promote AI education, OpenAI and Microsoft announced that they will be establishing a $2 million "societal resilience" fund.
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Meanwhile, the speculations suggest that OpenAI is working on a new AI-powered search engine which will take on the search engine giant Google. However, the company has not confirmed the update but has registered a domain hinting that the new search engine is under work. The company is expected to introduce it this week, claims report.