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The rise of misinformation spread from images produced by Artificial Intelligence (AI), Twitter presents a feature to block it.

The company is reportedly testing a feature called Community Notes, aiming to check content facts from the media.

In testing, the Community Records feature will apply fact checks sourced from multiple sites to certain photos and video clips.

The feature can also work if the contributor to Community Records, which has a fairly high rating, can apply notes to images shared in Tweets.

This option can be selected if the contributor believes the media itself has the potential to be misleading, regardless of which Tweet the media is showing.

Seperti catatan pada Tweet, label dapat menambahkan kontek tambahan ke gambar, seperti menunjukkan apakah foto dibuat menggunakan AI generatif atau dimanuhinkan.

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Launching Engadget, Wednesday, May 31, the Community Records feature can also prevent the viral spread of these photos. The goal, Twitter said, is for records to appear automatically on current and upcoming copies of the same image.

In fact, if shared in a new tweet by different users. However, Twitter still needs time to fine-tune image adjustments.

"It's currently designed to fail on the precision side when matching images, which means it won't fit into any images that look right for you," Twitter said.

"We will try to optimize this to expand coverage while avoiding mismatching," he added.

Currently, Twitter is testing media records only for single image tweets, but the company plans to expand the feature to tweets with multiple images and videos in the future.

Thus, Twitter's move can limit misleading viral content, given that not a few images are manipulated or deep counterfeiting and become commonplace.


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