
Fake Faces We Trust More
When you ask an AI image generator to show you a celebrity, something peculiar happens. Instead of retrieving an actual photograph, the system conjures a synthetic variant, a digital approximation that might look startlingly realistic yet never quite matches any real moment captured on camera. The technology doesn't remember faces the way humans do. It reconstructs them from statistical patterns learned across millions of images, creating what researchers describe as an “average” version that appears more trustworthy than the distinctive, imperfect reality of actual human features. This isn't a bug. It's how the systems are designed to work. Yet the consequences ripple far beyond technical curiosity. In the first quarter of 2025 alone, celebrities were targeted by deepfakes 47 times, an 81% increase compared to the whole of 2024. Elon Musk accounted for 24% of celebrity-related incidents with 20 separate targeting events, whilst Taylor Swift suffered 11 such attacks. In 38% of cases, t
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