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TikTok-linked AI project creates deepfake video from single image

Make it deeper until you make it.

In the near future, a single snapshot from a mobile phone and an audio track pulled out of the internet is everything you need to create amazingly authentic AI videos that can deceive viewers.

That's based on the newly released one Preview The owner of Tiktok, a new jaw-dropping AI model, said to come from Bytedance, has revived the declarant of E=MC², who died to demonstrate the unning ability of a futuristic tool.


Albert Einstein in New York City in a non-fake photograph taken in 1930. Bettmann Archive

Omnifman promises to allow everyday people to sing like pop stars, and make the average child sound as clever as a philosopher, the creator promised.

“Omnihuman significantly outperforms existing methods and generates very realistic human videos based on weak signal inputs, especially audio,” an introduction online project It is listed.

“It supports image input for any aspect ratio, whether it's portrait, half-body, or whole body images, providing more realistic and high-quality results in a variety of scenarios.”

The creators showed off their work on the online open access archive Arxiv earlier this week. Forbes It has been reported.

The public has not yet accessed it, but it tastes what multiple sample videos come, showing the subject from every angle, and most often creates all sorts of body and hand movements.

Einstein's incredible video shows the German-born genius enthusiastically gestured in front of the chalkboard, giving a speech about the value of art and emotions in the art.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4gryt0gicl4

And while the visual quality is top notch, the words are not his own. The audio comes from a speech given by neuroscientists and animal emotions researchers Jaak Pankseep More than a decade ago at the Tedxrainier event in Seattle.

“They're very impressive,” Freddie Tran Nagar, clinical associate professor of communication at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School of Communications and Journalism, said of the clip from an interview with Forbes.

“If you were thinking of reviving Humphrey Bogart and casting him into the film, I don't know what it would look like. But on a small screen, these are impressive, especially on the phone,” he said. I said. The idea has come to mind that in the near future, students can choose to teach statistics to Marilyn Monroe.

This tool runs the ordinance very much as realistic AI races get heated. Forbes proposed.

“Titktok can say, 'What do you know? Now you can make your own videos. Who needs humans?” he said. .

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