{"id":1699,"date":"2024-04-05T06:51:56","date_gmt":"2024-04-05T06:51:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aitesonics.com\/facebook-was-inundated-with-deepfaked-ads-impersonating-uks-prime-minister-143009584\/"},"modified":"2024-04-05T06:51:56","modified_gmt":"2024-04-05T06:51:56","slug":"facebook-was-inundated-with-deepfaked-ads-impersonating-uks-prime-minister-143009584","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/aitesonics.com\/facebook-was-inundated-with-deepfaked-ads-impersonating-uks-prime-minister-143009584\/","title":{"rendered":"Facebook was inundated with deepfaked ads impersonating UK's Prime Minister"},"content":{"rendered":"
Facebook was flooded with fake advertisements featuring a deepfaked Rishi Sunak ahead of the UK's general election that's expected to take place this year, according to research conducted<\/a> by communications company Fenimore Harper. The firm found 143 different ads impersonating the UK's Prime Minister on the social network last month, and it believes the ad may have reached more than 400,000 people. It also said that funding for the ads originated from 23 countries, including Turkey, Malaysia, the Philippines and the United States, and that the collective amount of money spent to promote them from December 8, 2023 to January 8, 2024 was $16,500.<\/p>\n As The Guardian<\/em><\/a> notes, one of the fake ads showed a BBC<\/em> newscast wherein Sunak said that the UK government has decided to invest in a stock market app launched by Elon Musk. That clip then reportedly linked to a fake BBC<\/em> news page promoting an investment scam. The video, embedded in Fenimore Harper's website<\/a>, seems pretty realistic if the viewer doesn't look too closely at people's mouths when they speak. Someone who has no idea what deepfakes are could easily be fooled into thinking that the video is legit.<\/p>\n The company says this is the "first widespread paid promotion of a deepfaked video of a UK political figure." That said, Meta has long been contending with election misinformation on its websites and apps. A spokesperson told The Guardian<\/em> that the "vast majority" of the adverts were disabled before Fenimore Harper's report was published and that "less than 0.5 percent of UK users saw any individual ad that did go live."<\/p>\n