Pictures of the artist, Shaima Seif, after losing weight, the volatility of communication sites!
In the age of social media, we must adhere to the slogan “Don’t believe everything you see on social media”! Where tens or even hundreds of incorrect photos and videos circulate every day, and they are widely circulated among social media pioneers. However, we always stress the importance of being accurate in the information we receive through various social media.
In this context, a group of photos spread widely on social media, whose publishers claimed that they show the Egyptian actress Shaima Seif, who has lost a lot of weight. However, it soon became clear that these images are not real, but rather the result of an artificial intelligence program.
In some of these photos, the fingers appear deformed
The pictures received hundreds of posts from several Facebook pages, but many commentators questioned their authenticity, as some indicated that they appeared in a series during the last month of Ramadan, and it is impossible that they lost all this weight in a short period, while others suggested that the pictures were the product of programs. artificial intelligence.
The images are incorrect and are artificially generated
In some of these images, the fingers appear deformed, which is one of the signs indicating, along with a number of other elements detailed by the news checking service of the “Agence France Presse”, that the images are the result of an artificial intelligence program.
The artist, Shaima Seif, shared the original account that published the photos via the “Story” feature on her Instagram account
Indeed, by searching for the origin of the images, it was found that they were posted on an Instagram account, which indicated that they were generated through an artificial intelligence program.
A recent photo of the artist Shaima Seif (Instagram)
The Egyptian actress re-shared this post – which explicitly says that the images are the result of artificial intelligence – via the “Al-Story” feature on her Instagram account.
Now tell us, dear reader, what do you think of these artificial intelligence-generated technologies that are filling social networking sites?