Synthetic human-like fakes: Difference between revisions

→‎2020's synthetic human-like fakes: + '''2021''' | Entertainment | The Swedish pop band w:ABBA published an album in September and will be performing shows where the music is live and real, but the visuals will be rejuvenated digital look-alikes of the band members displayed to the fans with w:holography technology
(→‎1930's synthetic human-like fakes: + pic of '''w:Voder''' demonstration pavillion at the w:1939 New York World's Fair)
(→‎2020's synthetic human-like fakes: + '''2021''' | Entertainment | The Swedish pop band w:ABBA published an album in September and will be performing shows where the music is live and real, but the visuals will be rejuvenated digital look-alikes of the band members displayed to the fans with w:holography technology)
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=== 2020's synthetic human-like fakes ===
=== 2020's synthetic human-like fakes ===
* '''2021''' | Entertainment | The Swedish pop band [[w:ABBA]] published an album in September and will be performing shows where the music is live and real, but the visuals will be [[#Age analysis and rejuvenating and aging syntheses|rejuvenated]] [[#Digital look-alikes|digital look-alikes]] of the band members displayed to the fans with [[w:holography]] technology. ABBA used [[w:Industrial Light & Magic]] as the purveyor of technology. [[w:Industrial Light & Magic]] was acquired by [[w:The Walt Disney Company]] in 2012 as part of their acquisition [[w:Lucasfilm]].


* '''2021''' | Controversy | July 2021 saw the release of [[w:Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain]] and soon controversy arose, as the director [[w:Morgan Neville]] admitted to [[w:Helen Rosner]], a food writer for [[w:The New Yorker]] that he had contracted an AI company to thieve [[w:Anthony Bourdain]]'s voice and used it to insert audio that sounded like him, without declaring it as faked.<ref name="NewYorker 2020">
* '''2021''' | Controversy | July 2021 saw the release of [[w:Roadrunner: A Film About Anthony Bourdain]] and soon controversy arose, as the director [[w:Morgan Neville]] admitted to [[w:Helen Rosner]], a food writer for [[w:The New Yorker]] that he had contracted an AI company to thieve [[w:Anthony Bourdain]]'s voice and used it to insert audio that sounded like him, without declaring it as faked.<ref name="NewYorker 2020">