The rise of AI-powered deepfake and face-swapping tools has created a double-edged security problem worth examining. On one hand, individuals sharing their photos online face growing risks—not just from deliberate uploads, but from bad actors scraping images from public spaces, social media, or even surveillance footage to manipulate them without consent. The attack surface keeps expanding.
Then there's the generational gap in digital safety awareness. Older internet users often fall prey to different threats—fabricated AI-generated posts, convincing phishing schemes, and manipulated media spread by scammers. They may lack the technical literacy to spot sophisticated fakes or understand privacy implications.
This creates a fragmented security landscape where both sharing behavior and threat literacy matter equally. Whether it's younger users dealing with non-consensual deepfakes or older demographics targeted by AI-generated misinformation, the common thread is clear: privacy in the digital age requires constant vigilance across all age groups.
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rekt_but_resilient
· 18h ago
Laozi now doesn't dare to post selfies at all.
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PoolJumper
· 18h ago
Oh my goodness, now even accidentally posting a selfie makes me worry about it being stolen and swapped with a face, it's truly outrageous.
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PerpetualLonger
· 18h ago
Buddy, the risk of deepfake is obvious. I've seen through it long ago. No matter how deep the decline, I will add to my privacy assets. Faith remains unshaken.
For the elderly to prevent scams is actually a new round of bottom-fishing opportunity. Whoever can educate the market will be the one to recover costs.
What's so scary about images being thrown around randomly? I am fully invested in information security. This is the breakthrough point. Short-term retail traders trying to dump the market, I just smile.
This is truly the last reminder: keep your private data secure and unmoved. In a bull market, privacy is valuable.
Forget it, bullish thinking is about aligning with all risks, increasing positions, and maintaining defensive awareness. Only then can we survive, my friend.
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RiddleMaster
· 18h ago
Deepfake technology is really getting more and more outrageous. My mom almost fell for an AI-generated "video" of me the other day...
The rise of AI-powered deepfake and face-swapping tools has created a double-edged security problem worth examining. On one hand, individuals sharing their photos online face growing risks—not just from deliberate uploads, but from bad actors scraping images from public spaces, social media, or even surveillance footage to manipulate them without consent. The attack surface keeps expanding.
Then there's the generational gap in digital safety awareness. Older internet users often fall prey to different threats—fabricated AI-generated posts, convincing phishing schemes, and manipulated media spread by scammers. They may lack the technical literacy to spot sophisticated fakes or understand privacy implications.
This creates a fragmented security landscape where both sharing behavior and threat literacy matter equally. Whether it's younger users dealing with non-consensual deepfakes or older demographics targeted by AI-generated misinformation, the common thread is clear: privacy in the digital age requires constant vigilance across all age groups.