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Inside China’s chilling network of AI generated PEOPLE on Facebook & Twitter spreading anti-vaxx lies & Covid fake news

CHINA has a sprawling creepy network of AI generated people who it uses to spread anti-vaxx lies and fake news about Covid.

Beijing is believed to use a massive "spamouflage" network to muddy the waters and promote its own interests to unwitting social media users - and its computer generated "people" are perhaps its most disturbing tactic.

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None of these people are real - they have all been created in a computer by China

Twitter and Facebook profiles are being fronted by pictures of people who simply do not exist - but have constructed by AI software.

These "people" have never been born - they are simply bundles of code with the illusion of personality, with varying ages, genders, facial shapes and ethnicities.

The photos are almost indistinguishable from real people and are photo realistic with the imperfections that bring faces to life - far beyond what would see in video games like The Sims.

Seeing one crossing your feed on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram you would never think twice that they may be "fake".

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And while the cutting edge tech of AI-generated faces has many harmless applications, numerous experts have said China uses a vast network of these people in a wing of its online propaganda campaign.

The AI "people" can help Chinese trolls beat standard checks on fake accounts, such as being able to trace stolen profile pictures using reverse image search.

Fake accounts are also believed to be used to bolster Chinese state media on Facebook - with the state also deploying so-called "warrior trolls" to fight a pro-China PR battle in online spaces in the West.

State-backed newspapers and TV channels have had massive social media growth in recent years as they pump out stories with claims including Covid came from a US lab and that Western vaccines are dangerous.

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China appears to have stepped up its efforts over the last few years to spread its narratives and influence people - especially in the wake of the Covid pandemic.

Key questions still remain over China's honesty in the first days of the outbreak as it has been accused of covering up key details and failing to warn the world about the risk.

And the debate still rages to whether or not Covid may have actually leaked from a Chinese bio lab in Wuhan, something Beijing furiously denies - instead deflecting allegations towards the US.

A coordinated influence operation on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube is using a mix of fake and re purposed accounts to push pro-China narratives

Centre for Information Resilience

China's army AI generated people play a key role in trying to shrug off these narratives and fight back against the West - attempting to reach folks with their perspectives and lies directly through social media.

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