Posts lauding anything from running in the rain to tiredness and a comfy bed are
springing up on Instagram and TikTok
“What a privilege it is to run in the rain. What a privilege it is to have a
house I need to clean.” Social media is usually criticised for being a toxic
space, but an emerging trend is pushing back against negativity with gratitude.
Posts entitled “What a privilege” feature everything from images of cosy beds
(What a privilege it is to be exhausted after a long day) to videos of
travelling (What a privilege it is to carry a heavy bag) to kitchen hobs (What a
privilege it is to think about what to make for dinner everyday) have sprung up
on Instagram and TikTok.
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Tag - Instagram
Child actor Kaylin Hayman fought back after she learned that a man had used AI
to make child sex abuse materials from images on her Instagram page
Last year, Kaylin Hayman walked into a Pittsburgh court to testify against a man
she’d never met who had used her face to make pornographic pictures with
artificial intelligence technology.
Kaylin, 16, is a child actress who starred in the Disney show Just Roll With It
from 2019 to 2021. The perpetrator, a 57-year-old man named James Smelko, had
targeted her because of her public profile. She is one of about 40 of his
victims, all of them child actors. In one of the images of Kaylin submitted into
evidence at the trial, Smelko used her face from a photo posted on Instagram
when she was 12, working on set, and superimposed it onto the naked body of
someone else.
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Internet Watch Foundation says illegal AI-made content is becoming more
prevalent on open web with high level of sophistication
Child sexual abuse imagery generated by artificial intelligence tools is
becoming more prevalent on the open web and reaching a “tipping point”,
according to a safety watchdog.
The Internet Watch Foundation said the amount of AI-made illegal content it had
seen online over the past six months had already exceeded the total for the
previous year.
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Facebook and Instagram owner reportedly dismisses about 24 workers for abusing
$25 meal credit system
Meta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram, has reportedly fired about 24 staff
at its Los Angeles offices for using their $25 meal credits to buy items such as
toothpaste, laundry detergent and wine glasses.
The tech firm, which is worth £1.2tn and also owns the messaging platform
WhatsApp, is said to have dismissed workers last week after an investigation
discovered staff had been abusing the system, including to send food home when
they were not in the office.
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Tech companies aren’t transparent about what they do with our photos – we asked
experts about best baby-pic practices
Welcome to Opt Out, a semi-regular column in which we help you navigate your
online privacy and show you how to say no to surveillance. If you’d like to skip
to a section about a particular risk you’re trying to protect your child
against, click the “Jump to” menu at the top of this article. Last week’s column
covered how to opt yourself out of tech companies using your posts to train
artificial intelligence.
You’ve got the cutest baby ever, and you want the world to know it. But you’re
also worried about what might happen to your baby’s picture once you release it
into the nebulous world of the internet. Should you post it?
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The assistant, which has sparked privacy concerns, can also be accessed on £299
Ray-Ban Meta sunglasses
Meta, the owner of Facebook and Instagram, has launched its artificial
intelligence assistant in the UK, alongside AI-boosted sunglasses modelled by
Mark Zuckerberg.
Meta’s AI assistant, which can generate text and images, is now available on its
social media platforms in the UK and Brazil, having already been launched in the
US and Australia.
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Our photo dumps used to be an aesthetic disruption. Now we’re just bending to
the app’s will
Last year, I took 658 photos during my four-day trip to Venice. Fifteen years
ago, I would have posted every single one of them to Facebook. And as I waited
the three hours for them to upload, I would have opened another tab to look
through all 500 photos in my second-cousin’s friend’s FLORIDA ‘09 Facebook
album, which would have included 48 shots of the same sunset and 16 of a chip
flavor she didn’t have back at home.
Nowadays, with Instagram as our primary photo-sharing method, that packet of
chips would end up on slide seven of what my second-cousin’s friend would call a
dump: a retrospective of her summer compacted into a carousel of artfully
artless images.
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Mark Zuckerberg’s new revamp is a far cry from the zip-up hoodies and suits
emblematic of earlier eras of Facebook
Mark Zuckerberg is revamping his public image with new threads. With a trio of
bold shirts worn in recent appearances, he’s communicating that he came, he saw,
he conquered and he will win again at any cost. The fits might be sick, but we
would do well to beware.
During a live, packed-auditorium podcast interview last week, the CEO of Meta
wore a drop-shouldered black shirt reading “pathei mathos”, Greek for “learning
through suffering”. At his 40th birthday party in May, he donned a black tee
with the motto “Carthago delenda est,” which translates from Latin to “Carthage
must be destroyed.” He wore a black shirt with black text that read “Aut Zuck
aut nihil” during Meta’s Connect product demonstration on Wednesday.
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Mark Zuckerberg is embracing both AI and full-on imperial monomania. As for
petty gripes about elections and teen mental health, so what?
The good news is that Mark Zuckerberg has become bored of looking like an answer
to the AI prompt “efit of a teen villain”. The bad? While the Meta overlord has
grown out the Caesar hairstyle that has sustained him since 2016, he is now
leaning in to open imperial monomania. This week’s Meta Connect conference saw
Mark take the stage in a T-shirt reading Aut Zuck Aut Nihil. Either Zuck Or
Nothing. The original was Aut Caesar Aut Nihil and was enthusiastically adopted
as a motto by one of the worst Borgias (tough field) … but look, I’m sure it’s
ironic. Mark’s such a gifted ironist.
We’ll get to the magic glasses and AI feedspam he was pushing at this week’s
event in a minute – but before we do, let’s recap. Easily the most significant
thing Mark Zuckerberg has said this year was that he isn’t sorry any more – in
fact, that he wished he’d never said sorry for most of what he’d ever said sorry
for. I paraphrase only slightly. A couple of weeks ago, Zuckerberg appeared on
stage for a podcast and called Facebook’s willingness to offer stakes-free
apologies for things he wasn’t to blame for – like election manipulation or the
effect of social media on teen mental health – “a 20-year mistake”.
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Though the message has been shared by many users, including celebrities, it
offers no copyright or privacy protection
The “Goodbye Meta AI” message, which purports to protect the user from having
the likes of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp use their accounts as an AI
training camp, has become an increasingly common feature on timelines. It has
been shared by actors and sports stars – including James McAvoy, Ashley Tisdale
and Tom Brady – as well as hundreds of thousands of others.
But why – and what effect, if any, will it have?
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