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tedk-42 6 hours ago

There are a lot of AI generated shorts around animals.

A common thing I see is a baby animal needing rescue by a human (which it does) and it comes back later on and rewards the human with a gift of some kind it thinks is valuable.

I watch a few podcasts as well and there are more that have their scripts generated and voiced by AI

mavamaarten 4 hours ago | parent | next [-]

It's awful :(

I saw a video I wanted to share with someone, but it was part of a compilation. So you just search for it, right?

So I searched "cat lets brick fall onto mouse" and got... 100000 AI generated videos of cats with bricks? And cats with mice and cats being rescued by people (like you said). But not the video I was looking for.

We've totally passed the point where real information is impossible to find anymore. Video generation was really out of reach / delayed for a long time, and honestly all of those probably have a digital watermark in them that could be detected. YouTube could have prevented this if they'd have just been more proactive with detection and filtration. A simple "AI generated" and "not AI generated" filter would have prevented this.

gbugniot 24 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

> A common thing I see is a baby animal needing rescue by a human (which it does) and it comes back later on and rewards the human with a gift of some kind it thinks is valuable.

I've posted an article on this matter: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46121555

hamasho 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

I see a lot of educational animal videos that copy the content of BBC Earth only to replace David Attenborough voice with AI, and it unreasonably irritates me.

bulbar 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

That's an improvement as before people would abuse real animals to fake seemingly wholesome "before-after" videos by showing snippets in the wrong order.

6 hours ago | parent | next [-]
[deleted]
setopt 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Source?

bulbar 6 hours ago | parent [-]

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/article/how-fake-...

Another common theme is to kill rare animals to stage cool photographs. However, I don't assume AI slop will (fully) replace that cruelty, unfortunately. But maybe using AI slop will be easier than animal abuse/killing so that those business models run dry for the most part.

Galanwe 5 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

My feed is full of AI generated shorts summarizing books, animes, movies. The original piece name is never mentioned, and it tells the story in a very descriptive way, such as "The man was alone in the woods when...".

rapnie 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Cats getting totally excited to see their owner, because they dearly missed them. Cats filmed in night cam dropping weird animals from the forest on sleeping boss. Olympic athletes, gorgeous, but not real. Countless disasters where people die, generated. Youtube shorts is a pile of steaming garbage. As long as it sells, your brain may rot.

Worst are imho on the regular long vids side, the geopolitical advisor deep fakes, giving background to the news. Some with well over a million followers. Many of those have the same "we are a fan of the real person" disclaimer, many have no disclaimer.

And no one in the comments, of which many look fake too, notices it is AI. That is the most scary part.

dspillett 2 hours ago | parent [-]

> And no one in the comments, of which many look fake too, notices it is AI. That is the most scary part.

Many who notice won't bother commenting, because most who notice know how pointless that is (counterproductive in fact: a comment is an interaction, any interaction is a positive for the "content"). Those that do notice and comment are either drowned out by

• those too numbed on the brain to care, let alone notice, who lap it up, and praise it

• bots (either those being used to interact with the clip to drive it's interactions counters, or more general spam bots)

or if there is anyone/anybot monitoring the negative comments are removed.