AUSTIN, Texas — Korean. Arabic. Dutch. I don’t know three languages, but with AI I can speak them fluently. It’s not perfect yet, but it’s pretty close. We generated three videos using HeyGen, an AI language tool on a website that anyone can use.
“That’s one of the most amazing aspects of this technology. With just this idea, you can start communicating with the world seamlessly in any language.”Next generation creatives use AI to create marketing content says Steve Mudd, CEO and founder of the studio Talentless AI. He believes that the potential of AI is amazing.
“Generative AI in particular is the largest collection of storytelling capabilities, frameworks, and knowledge ever assembled,” Mudd explains.
Steve created the movie clip using AI tools from MidJourney, Luma, Runway, and Elemental Labs. The people in the lifelike clips he created don’t exist. “It will probably be three to six months before the world’s first full-length AI film is released,” he predicts.
Steve also enjoyed cat videos and made it look like I was doing dance moves. But he showed us how easy it is to create synthetic media, where the wonders of AI turn into unsettling. “Synthetic media is like taking aspects of real life, where you replicate people’s voices and hear about deepfakes,” he says.
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Using my image and voice, Steve demonstrated: So I was able to clone your voice and basically layer it on top of mine. ”
In Steve’s new video creation, he says, “In a year when everyone is talking about artificial intelligence, at the end of the day, real intelligence matters.”
But he didn’t stop there. “And to take it a step further, I took a photo of you and superimposed your face on top of mine,” Steve added.
The Austin-based hidden layer provides security to AI and protects machine learning models from hacking. But CEO Chris Sestito also notes that AI models will be increasingly used to create disruptive content. “So it’s now starting to go into areas like the state actor level, or the leadership level of states and government organizations. Now, whether it’s a phone call or an entire image, you can imitate it. ” he warns.
How can you tell the difference? “You can’t do that,” Steve warns. “You can’t. It comes down to being media savvy and understanding where I’m seeing this content. What’s the larger context of it? Is it CBS’s Is it coming from a trusted source like Yahoo! Or is it coming from a random website designed to look like a genuine website? Ever since social media became popular, this It’s the same question: Where did that information come from?
And this is just the beginning.