Microsoft restricts Designer AI used to make Taylor Swift deepfakes

Microsoft restricts Designer AI used to make Taylor Swift deepfakes

[ad_1]

Microsoft has updated its free, online Designer AI image generator to prevent users from creating more images resembling celebrities in explicit scenarios, according to independent media outlet 404 Media.

The updates came after an explicit series of deepfakes of musician Taylor Swift, which 404 also traced back to Microsoft’s Designer AI, began circulating on X, Reddit, and various other website and social platforms last week, in violation of Microsoft’s Services Agreement, which states “Don’t publicly display or use the Services to generate or share inappropriate content or material (involving, for example, nudity, bestiality, pornography, offensive language, graphic violence, self-harm, or criminal activity).”

OpenAI’s DALL-E 3, which powers the tool, and Microsoft Designer itself also had built-in technical prohibitions against users’ asking the AI tool to generate explicit imagery.

Nonetheless, some users were clearly able to get around these prohibitions using prompt engineering techniques, leading to the creation and spread of the Swift images.

Calls for more regulations on AI

The spread of the images prompted outrage from fans online, as well as a call for new legislation from U.S. lawmakers, the White House, and SAG-AFTRA, the U.S. union representing actors.

While Microsoft has not yet issued a public statement on the matter, CEO Satya Nadella on Friday told NBC News Anchor Lester Holt:

“Yes, we have to act,” Nadella said in response to a question about the deepfakes of Swift. “I think we all benefit when the online world is a safe world. And so I don’t think anyone would want an online world that is completely not safe for both content creators and content consumers. So therefore, I think it behooves us to move fast on this.”

He additionally signaled some lukewarm support for collaborating with lawmakers around the issue of AI deepfakes, though stopped short of calling for a new bill or new laws.

“But it is about global, societal, you know, I’ll say convergence on certain norms,” he continued. “Especially when you have law and law enforcement and tech platforms that can come together, I think we can govern a lot more than we give ourselves credit for.”

SAG-AFTRA is endorsing a new bill, the Preventing Deepfakes of Intimate Images Act introduced by Democratic Congressman Joe Morelle of New York state back in May 2023, which would make the dissemination of explicit deepfakes without the consent of the source a federal crime punishable by fines and a decade in prison.

The bill remains in committee and would need to be passed by both the House of Representatives (of which Morelle is a member) and the Senate and signed by the U.S. President to become law.

Specific updates: will they hold?

As for what specific updates were made to the Designer AI service, 404 reported that it previously was possible to prompt the service with “slightly misspelling the name of celebrities, and describing images that don’t use any sexual terms but result on sexually suggestive images,” but that these techniques no longer work.

Yet the question remains if motivated users will keep testing and find work-arounds to the new restrictions.

Swift has also reportedly considered taking legal action over the images, though if and who would be named in a lawsuit is still unanswered for now.

The news comes at a bad time for Microsoft, as the U.S. regulatory agency the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) just announced it was probing Microsoft’s investment into OpenAI (as well as other deals between Anthropic and Amazon and Alphabet).

VentureBeat’s mission is to be a digital town square for technical decision-makers to gain knowledge about transformative enterprise technology and transact. Discover our Briefings.

[ad_2]

Comments

No comments yet. Why don’t you start the discussion?

اترك تعليقاً

لن يتم نشر عنوان بريدك الإلكتروني. الحقول الإلزامية مشار إليها بـ *