TruthArchive.ai - Related Video Feed

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- The situation on x is severe. - rise of bots and fake accounts, automated and AI powered bots are flooding s app, and they are getting smarter. - In one study, a botnet of over 1,000 fake accounts was caught promoting crypto scams. - During a political debate, over a thousand bots pushed coordinated false claims with some accounts tweeting every two minutes. - By 02/2024, 37% of all Internet traffic came from malicious bots. - These bots now use advanced AI models like Chat to generate human like responses and interact with each other, making them nearly impossible to detect. - The platform's ad driven business model thrives on outrage and engagement. - Emotional, polarizing content gets more clicks, and bots are perfect for spreading it. - Five, real world impact. Bots distort conversations, amplify falsehoods, and manipulate public opinion. - Conclusion. How bad is it? Very bad.

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Speaker 0 describes Tim Ballard as having worked with Glenn Beck to build Underground Railroad, portraying Beck as Ballard’s close ally whenever Ballard needed to break a story on child trafficking. When Ballard considered running for Senate and would have likely won with momentum after the Sound of Freedom release, attacks began, and Glenn Beck reportedly “threw him under the bus.” Speaker 0 asserts that Beck pledged allegiance to Israel, is “bought and paid for,” and “Israel's bitch,” claiming Ballard watched a video and realized this. Speaker 1 adds a claim about theSound of Freedom narrative: the child trafficking ring Ballard busted in South America, depicted in the movie, was an Israeli-run sex trafficking ring, run by Israelis. The head of that ring allegedly escaped to Portugal where a judge let him go, and nobody knows where this guy ended up. The speakers state that this is the real story of Sound of Freedom and that “It was an Israeli run sex trafficking ring,” noting that this is not told to the audience and urging others to research it. Speaker 1 then transitions to commentary on Twitter, stating that Twitter is not a free speech platform and is not an open information highway; it is a military application, a propaganda operation, highly bodied, highly artificial, highly synthetic, and manipulated. They acknowledge using it daily but emphasize that not everything is as it seems on the platform. They caution that prominent accounts cannot be taken at face value because campaigns are run, the algorithm is manipulated, and there are bots and unauthentic accounts. The speakers urge awareness of the battlefield on which Twitter is engaged, and advise developing a wary eye toward content, encouraging audiences to examine profiles, retweets, boosts, follows, and networks to understand who is using the same messaging and why.

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Welcome to the Internet, where half the accounts aren't people. They're bots. Crypto scams, fake comments, instant DMs, and paid praise, all churned out by lines of code. It's a digital masquerade, and guess what? The platforms are in on it. They let it happen because bots drive numbers. More views, more likes, more ad money. There are millions of them lurking in the shadows, posting, buying, selling, lying. The Internet isn't fake. Most of it is pretending to be real. Think about it. That glowing review could be a bot. That viral post, probably a bot. And those followers? Not every one of them has a heartbeat. Don't feed the bots. Don't trust the hype. In this world of digital deception, it's up to you to sift through the noise and find the truth.

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Ethical hacker Rachel Toback demonstrates how easy it is for criminals to use online information to scam people. Using an AI-powered app, Toback mimics a colleague's voice and successfully tricks her into revealing personal information. She explains that anyone can be spoofed, even if they are not a public figure, by changing the pitch and modulation of their voice. Attackers often target individuals who have a relationship with someone else and impersonate them to gain trust. This highlights the importance of understanding how criminals think in order to protect oneself online.

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Welcome to the Internet, where half the accounts aren't people. They're bots. Crypto scams, fake comments, instant DMs, and paid praise, all churned out by lines of code. It's a digital masquerade, and guess what? The platforms are in on it. They let it happen because bots drive numbers. More views, more likes, more ad money. They pretend it's under control, but it's not. There are millions of them lurking in the shadows, posting, buying, selling, lying. The Internet isn't fake. Most of it is pretending to be real. Think about it. That glowing review could be a bot. That viral post, probably a bot. And those followers? Not every one of them has a heartbeat. Don't feed the bots. Don't trust the hype. In this world of digital deception, it's up to you to sift through the noise and find the truth.

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Speaker 0: When I first met Tim Ballard, he was in this wild legal fight, and Glenn Beck helped him build Underground Railroad. They were best friends. Whenever Sam or Tim needed to break a story about child trafficking, Glenn Beck was “his fucking dude.” Then Tim was considering running for Senate or Congress, and with the momentum from Sound of Freedom, he seemed like a shoo-in, and he was set to upset some politician. After those attacks began, Glenn Beck “threw him under the bus,” and Tim told me, “I can’t believe that Glenn would fucking do that to me.” That exact video I showed him—Tim’s friend pledging allegiance to Israel, “he’s bought and paid for,” “not your friend,” “controlled by our intelligence agencies,” “Israel’s bitch.” Tim watched that one video and said, “holy fuck.” Speaker 1: Ryan, you might know this—the child ring Tim Ballard busted up in South America, depicted in Sound of Freedom, was Israeli-run. It was run by Israelis. The head of that ring escaped to Portugal, where a judge basically let him go, and nobody knows where that guy ended up. That’s the real story of Sound of Freedom: an Israeli-run sex-trafficking ring. You’re not told that. Do research and find out about it. That’s who was running the ring. So there’s a lot of interconnection—it's always them, man. It always comes back to them. It seems to always come back to them. It’s like 6,000,000 to one odds. Speaker 0: Every single time. Every single time. It’s strange how that happens. But you wanna wrap it up, Sam? Speaker 1: Yeah. Let’s wrap it up. Listen, everybody. Twitter is not a free speech platform. It is not an open, super highway of information. It is a military application. It is a propaganda operation. It is highly bodied, highly artificial, highly synthetic and manipulated. I’m not saying don’t use it; I use it every day. We absolutely must use it as best we can, but I need everybody to be aware that not everything is as it seems on this platform. You cannot take this platform at face value. Many of the big accounts you see mainstream through your feed aren’t to be taken at face value. They’re running campaigns, being paid, boosted, the algorithm manipulated, with bots and unauthentic accounts. You must be aware of the battlefield you’re engaging on. And I’m not saying you should leave. On the contrary, I want you here, battling. But it’s not what it seems. There’s a lot of smoke and mirrors, shadows, espionage, and spy games on this platform, and you need to be savvy. Don’t develop mistrust of everybody, but develop a wary eye. Look at people’s Twitter profiles, scroll through their feeds, see who they’re retweeting, who they’re boosting, who they’re following, who their networks are, who’s using the same message.

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In this video, we explore a world where presentations and artificial intelligence come together. To use this technology, simply input the topic or title of your presentation and let Degtypos do the thinking. You can also choose your goal for the presentation to optimize the suggested content. With this tool, you'll have a first draft to start working with.

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Speaker 0 announces that they have released the most dangerous discovery that explains everything, and that the video is in their bio.

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"Welcome to the Internet, where half the accounts aren't people. They're bots. Crypto scams, fake comments, instant DMs, and paid praise, all churned out by lines of code." "It's a digital masquerade, and guess what? The platforms are in on it." "They let it happen because bots drive numbers. More views, more likes, more ad money." "They pretend it's under control, but it's not." "There are millions of them lurking in the shadows, posting, buying, selling, lying." "The Internet isn't fake." "Most of it is pretending to be real." "Think about it. That glowing review could be a bot." "That viral post, probably a bot." "And those followers?" "Not every one of them has a heartbeat." "Don't feed the bots. Don't trust the hype." "In this world of digital deception, it's up to you to sift through the noise and find the truth."

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This is Amani Brahim from DeepTrust, introducing CapOrNot. It's a bot I built using the DeepTrust speech alpha model to detect deep fake voices on Twitter. To use it, tag the bot in a video you want to fact check. It will respond with a speech analysis output, including an average score and a heat map showing where it detects deepfake content. In an example, the bot correctly identifies a silent portion of the video. It's a cool tool.

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I'm using my Vision Pro, and this is my AI clone lip syncing to my voice in real time. This AI takes my audio input and generates a video of me speaking instantly. You can create your own AI clone by uploading a three-minute video of yourself. In 24 hours, you'll receive your clone. By switching the camera, you can use your clone in meetings while you relax. It's that easy!

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Sam: I hope that someday anybody who’s gone over there and touched that wall will never be able to walk out in public without hanging their head in shame ever again. Brian: It’s funny, Sam, because Tim Ballard was going through crazy lawfare. Glenn Beck helped him build underground railroad—they were best friends. When Sam needed or Tim needed to break a story about child trafficking, Glenn Beck was his guy. Then, when Tim was considering running for senate (or congress) and would have momentum after the Sound of Freedom release, attacks started. Glenn Beck threw him under the bus, and Sam shows him a video where Beck pledges allegiance to Israel; he’s bought and paid for, not Tim’s friend, controlled by our intelligence agencies, Israel’s bitch. He watched that video and was shocked. Sam: Brian, you probably know this. Most people don’t know this. The child ring Tim Ballard busted up in South America, the one portrayed in Sound of Freedom, was Israeli-run. It was run by Israelis. The head of that ring escaped to Portugal where a judge let him go, and nobody knows where he ended up. So that’s the real story of Sound of Freedom. It was an Israeli-run sex trafficking ring. You’re not told that. You should go research and find out who was running the ring. So a lot of intro—it’s always them, man. It always comes back to them. Brian: Every single time. Every single time. It’s like 6,000,000 to 1 odds. You know? It’s just strange how that happens. But you wanna wrap it up, Sam? Sam: Yeah. Let’s wrap it up. Listen, everybody. Twitter is not an open, superhighway of information. It is a military application. It is a propaganda operation. It is highly bodied, highly artificial, highly synthetic and manipulated. And I’m not saying don’t use it. I use it every day. We absolutely must use it as best we can. But I need everybody to be aware that not everything is as it seems on this platform. You cannot take this platform at face value. Many of the big accounts that these mainstream accounts you see coming through your feed, you cannot take them at face value. You must be aware that they’re running campaigns. They’re being paid. They’re boosted. The algorithm is being manipulated. There are bots and unauthentic accounts and fake accounts. You must be aware of the battlefield on which you’re engaging. I’m not telling you to go leave. On the contrary, I want you here, battling, but it is not what it seems. There’s a lot of smoke and mirrors and shadows and espionage and spy games on this platform. You really need to be aware of that. You need to get savvy to it. And I don’t want you to develop a mistrust of everybody. I want you to develop a more wary eye of what’s going on. I want you to look at people’s Twitter profiles. Scroll through their feeds and see who they’re retweeting, who they’re boosting, who they’re following, who their little networks are, who’s using the same messaging. Why? Brian: Because— Sam: they...

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Welcome to the Internet, where half the accounts aren't people. They're bots. Crypto scams, fake comments, instant DMs, and paid praise, all churned out by lines of code. It's a digital masquerade, and guess what? The platforms are in on it. They let it happen because bots drive numbers. More views, more likes, more ad money. They pretend it's under control, but it's not. There are millions of them lurking in the shadows, posting, buying, selling, lying. The Internet isn't fake. Most of it is pretending to be real. That glowing review could be a bot. That viral post, probably a bot. And those followers? Not every one of them has a heartbeat. Don't feed the bots. Don't trust the hype. In this world of digital deception, it's up to you to sift through the noise and find the truth.

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We created a website called Hamilton 68 to track Russian accounts. Our website shows that there are currently Russian bots spreading information.

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I just found out that the influencer I've been following for months isn't even real. Can you believe it? That flawless face. Excavation Pro. Pro. Those perfect posts completely generated by AI. It's wild how these virtual influencers are taking over. They sell products, stream live, and gain followers faster than any human could. And the craziest part? Most of us don't even notice. Brands are catching on. Why hire a person who might mess up or cause a scandal when you can have a virtual ambassador who's always on brand, never ages, and never complains? These AI models are designed to be perfect, and they're winning our trust. Think about it. We're following pixels, not people. We're engaging with characters that don't need sleep or breaks, and they're always ready to promote the next big thing. It's a new era of influence, and it's happening right under our noses.

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Don't trust, verify. In the next 5-10 years, deepfakes will make it hard to distinguish real from fake. Shift your mindset to verify things through experience and intuition. Devices are affecting our brain connections, so rely on personal verification.

a16z Podcast

Can We Detect a Deepfake?
Guests: Vijay Balasubramaniyan
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There has been a 1400% increase in deep fakes in the first half of this year compared to last year, with tools for voice cloning rising from 120 to 350. Generative adversarial networks (GANs) have improved the ability to clone voices and likenesses, making it difficult to differentiate between human and machine. Deep fakes are now prevalent in politics, commerce, and media, with significant incidents of election misinformation and scams. For example, a deep fake of President Biden was used in a political misinformation campaign earlier this year. Detection of deep fakes is highly effective, with a 99% accuracy rate. The cost of detection is significantly lower than creation, making it economically feasible for organizations to implement detection strategies. Policy recommendations include making it difficult for fraudsters while allowing flexibility for creators, similar to the CAN-SPAM Act for email marketing. Platforms should be held accountable for clearly marking AI-generated content to help consumers distinguish between real and fake. Overall, while deep fakes present challenges, effective detection and policy measures can mitigate risks.

TED

When AI Can Fake Reality, Who Can You Trust? | Sam Gregory | TED
Guests: Sam Gregory
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As generative AI advances, distinguishing real from fake content becomes increasingly difficult, impacting trust in information. Deep fakes harm women and distort political narratives. Sam Gregory leads Witness, focusing on using technology to defend human rights. A rapid response task force analyzes deep fakes, revealing challenges in verification. To combat misinformation, three steps are essential: equipping journalists with detection tools, ensuring transparency in AI-generated content, and establishing accountability in AI systems. Without these, society risks losing its ability to discern truth.

Coldfusion

Google Duplex A.I. - How Does it Work?
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Google Duplex is an extension of Google Assistant that can make phone calls to schedule appointments. It utilizes a deep neural network built on WaveNet technology, allowing it to engage in realistic conversations. Duplex has been trained specifically for booking and inquiries, not general conversation. The public reaction has been mixed, with concerns about transparency. Duplex uses recurrent neural networks to understand context and handle interruptions. While it has passed a narrow version of the Turing test, its future applications remain uncertain. Overall, Duplex represents a significant advancement in AI technology.

Coldfusion

Deepfakes - Real Consequences
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The rise of deep fakes has transformed how we perceive video content, allowing altered videos of famous individuals to be created easily and inexpensively. This technology can produce realistic changes, such as swapping faces or altering speech, using AI and existing footage. While deep fakes can be entertaining, they pose significant risks, particularly in politics, where they can misrepresent statements. Detecting fake videos is challenging, but potential solutions include AI detection tools and blockchain verification. The discussion highlights the dual nature of deep fakes, emphasizing both their innovative potential and ethical concerns.

TED

Fake videos of real people -- and how to spot them | Supasorn Suwajanakorn
Guests: Supasorn Suwajanakorn
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Supasorn Suwajanakorn discusses creating realistic 3D models of individuals using existing photos and videos, inspired by interactive Holocaust survivor holograms. The technology can replicate voices and mannerisms, raising concerns about misuse. He emphasizes the importance of awareness and developing countermeasures like Reality Defender to combat fake content.

TED

What if AI Could Spot Your Lies? | Riccardo Loconte | TED
Guests: Riccardo Loconte
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Riccardo Loconte discusses the prevalence of lying, noting that humans lie about two times daily and struggle to detect lies accurately, with even experts performing slightly better than chance. He explores the potential of AI, specifically large language models like FLAN-T5, to detect deception. His study found that while these models can classify deceptive statements effectively, they struggle with generalization across contexts. He envisions a future where AI aids in lie detection but warns against blind reliance on technology, emphasizing the need for critical thinking and interpretability in AI outputs.

The Koerner Office

She Makes $10M/Year and Doesn’t Even Exist (AI Influencers Explained)
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The episode dives into a world where AI-generated assets power multimillion-dollar revenue streams, including AI influencers who don’t exist in real life. The co-host discusses a person claiming $10 million in annual revenue from AI-driven content, generated and amplified entirely through AI ads. The conversation centers on practical pathways for individuals who want to earn substantial income with minimal initial capital, proposing a lean model of creating dozens of ads per month for businesses that already spend heavily on advertising. The core idea is to package AI-generated video, voice, and scripts into scalable offerings—either as standalone AI influencers or as agencies producing ads for clients. Roma Torres, an expert in AI-generated video at Arc Ads, explains how the technology evolved from static images to fully talking, lip-synced avatars and how brands are using these assets to build trust and drive engagement. The discussion covers the mechanics of building an AI actor, selecting scripts and emotions, controlling accents, and designing visuals that hook viewers within the first seconds. The hosts emphasize the importance of niche selection and audience targeting, noting that some markets, such as international language learners or services for people with disabilities, respond well to AI-generated content. They also note that the quality and relatability of voice, emotion, and gestures dramatically affect perceived realism and effectiveness. The episode moves into tactical applications: using AI actors for ads across mobile apps, e-commerce, and lead-generation services, as well as for full-fledged AI influencer campaigns. The conversation highlights how agencies can acquire clients by demonstrating the cost-efficiency of AI-produced content and by offering bundled services—like 20 ads a month for a fixed fee—creating recurring revenue. They discuss practical steps, from spying on competitors in ad libraries to scouting niches with high demand and using trend insights to tailor content. The broader takeaway is that the future of advertising increasingly blends automation, creativity, and strategic targeting to scale quickly, while recognizing that consistency, originality, and smart experimentation remain essential.

Johnny Harris

I Deep Faked Myself, Here's Why It Matters
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Johnny Harris explores the rise of deepfakes, highlighting their potential to undermine public trust and disrupt legal systems. He demonstrates how advanced AI, particularly generative adversarial networks, creates hyper-realistic fakes, making it increasingly difficult to discern reality. Deepfakes pose risks in various domains, including cybercrime and misinformation, as evidenced by a fake video of Ukraine's president during the invasion. While some countries are beginning to regulate deepfakes, the technology's rapid evolution presents ongoing challenges for lawmakers and society.

The BigDeal

AI Expert: Automate or Be Automated
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Codie Sanchez hosts a guest who has built one of the leading AI companies that takes our human mind and recreates it online. The host asks, 'If any video you see online can be AI generated, how do you know what to trust?' The guest insists that 'the most unique thing that you have is your mind' and describes his work around a 'digital mind'—a bidirectional, personalized clone of a person’s thinking and voice. He notes that AI voiceovers almost caused a post to be made from someone else’s video, illustrating the trust challenge in a world of AI‑generated content. He sketches the arc from pattern recognition to a hyper-connected future. He says, 'AI is just math. It’s pattern recognition,' and argues that the endgame is hyperintelligent AI at our fingertips: 'I think the end in mine is AI that is hyper intelligent, generating realistic videos, generating infinitely all night, improving itself.' With that premise, he frames two camps: the doomer who fears disruption and the person who sees opportunity. He urges listeners to start with the end in mind: plan for a world where AI is at work and focus on what stands out. He predicts the creator economy will rise as distribution becomes easier but differentiation grows harder, so the 8020 likely becomes 955, where the 5% reap the benefits of the 95. On practical adoption, the guest explains how ordinary people can apply AI now. AI evolved from telling a cat from a dog in 2014 to predicting emotions from tweets. He highlights education as a positive AI outcome: Bloom's two sigma shows that private tutors boost achievement by two standard deviations. Alpha School’s model uses individualized education with AI assistance and two hours of active learning daily, then curiosity-driven exploration. Education becomes an interactive, choose-your-own-adventure guided by AI toward personalized paths and continual practice. On the future of work, he lists the first AI‑driven jobs as software engineering, consulting, and any role not focused on relationships. He notes that the 8020 becomes 955 because the best can scale while branding matters. He envisions UBI as likely to prevent mass disruption, and emphasizes data ownership—'you own your data, we're not sharing with other people it can be deleted at any time.' He argues authenticity and clear founder intent will shape trust, keeping the long‑term outlook hopeful: communities, creativity, and meaningful connection endure even as AI handles routine tasks.
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