Elon Musk's X Amplifies Fact-Checking With Community Notes To Take On Edited and AI-Generated Videos


20-Year Pro Trader Reveals His "MoneyLine"

Ditch your indicators and use the "MoneyLine". A simple line tells you when to buy and sell without the guesswork. It’s a line on a chart that’s helped Nic Chahine win 83% of his options buys. Here's how he does it.


Elon Musk-owned X (formerly Twitter) announced the expansion of crowdsourced fact-checking tool Community Notes to videos as it looks to combat misinformation via edited clips and AI-generated videos.

What Happened: Community Notes is now available for videos, nearly ten months after the Musk-owned social media platform launched the tool for images.

See Also: Propaganda At The Pace Of AI: New AI Tool Shows The Alarming Ease Of Crafting Convincing Fake News

"Notes written on videos will automatically show on other posts containing matching videos. A highly-scalable way of adding context to edited clips, AI-generated videos, and more," said X's Community Notes.

Not just for images anymore — introducing notes on videos!

Notes written on videos will automatically show on other posts containing matching videos. A highly-scalable way of adding context to edited clips, AI-generated videos, and more. Available to all Top Writers 🏅 https://t.co/s92XoA1SZ9 pic.twitter.com/I2JF4NQZ9q

— Community Notes (@CommunityNotes) September 5, 2023

This comes a week after X announced that the Community Notes feature will now be applicable on matching images as well – simply put, if an image post has been flagged by the community and a note has been added, it will reflect on other matching images posted on the platform to combat misinformation more effectively.

Community Notes members will now be able to access these tools for videos as well.

Why It Is Important: Community Notes is an open-source tool that allows users to call out misinformation and provide readers with added context about a given topic.

This becomes even more important at a time when AI-powered propaganda tools have become easily accessible – a developer recently built a "disinformation machine" using OpenAI's ChatGPT and other AI tools like Midjourney to craft disinformation, complete with news clippings and anchor videos.

All of this cost only $400 and two months of work, showing how easy and cheap it is to spread disinformation at scale.

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See Also: iPhone 15 May Face Hurdle In China As Government Officials Receive Foreign Device Ban, Says Report

Image Credits – Shutterstock


20-Year Pro Trader Reveals His "MoneyLine"

Ditch your indicators and use the "MoneyLine". A simple line tells you when to buy and sell without the guesswork. It’s a line on a chart that’s helped Nic Chahine win 83% of his options buys. Here's how he does it.


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