Propaganda Or Misinformation Quotes

Quotes tagged as "propaganda-or-misinformation" Showing 1-5 of 5
“Legacy mainstream media publications is there to represent the views and opinion of those who are rich or corporate . They project their thoughts and control the masses.
They are used as mouthpiece or weapon to promote racism, classism, war, hate speech, fear, to be divisive, instigators , to cause instability by providing misinformation.
Rich people or corporate used the media to fight their competitors , enemies , those who question them and those whom they don’t approve of.
They used it to cover up their crimes, shame, wrongs, illegal ways, corruption, to lie and character assassinate others.
They want to control how people should think, drive the narrative and influence how people should behave. They are always bias , double standard, power mongering, condescending and intimidate the poor. They censor the truth and facts , publish lies, rumors, propaganda and misinformation”
De philosopher DJ Kyos

“Being supported by mainstream legacy media is scary because they never support good things, good people, or people with good intentions.”
De philosopher DJ Kyos

“Whenever there is an agenda or certain narrative to be pushed. evidence is planted. Facts are changed. Truth is misquoted. There is spread of misinformation. Influencers and media is paid. Bots, social media, AI, scripts and algorithm used.”
De philosopher DJ Kyos

“People whose world is made of lies can't stand the truth. They don't want to hear the truth because it destroys the world they've created and live in. So, they have to keep lying to maintain the life they're living.”
De philosopher DJ Kyos

“In an era where organizations are rapidly advancing artificial intelligence to the point where images and videos can be altered so convincingly that they are indistinguishable from authentic content, significant risks arise. A key concern is how employees will be protected from wrongful termination based on manipulated visual evidence. Especially in situations where a company may already be inclined to dismiss them.

Similarly, this raises serious implications for legal proceedings. How will individuals be protected from false accusations when AI generated or AI altered footage is presented as evidence in investigations or court cases?

There are also substantial political risks. How will politicians or opposition figures be safeguarded from fabricated scandal videos depicting them engaging in unethical or inappropriate behavior? Beyond politics, how will citizens be protected from media outlets that may intentionally or unintentionally publish misleading stories based on AI generated imagery or video content?

On a global scale, AI created videos could provoke international tensions, destabilize governments, or even trigger military conflict if nations act on falsified visual information. This leads to broader societal concerns: How do we prevent the public from being influenced, manipulated, or deceived by AI generated videos that appear unquestionably real? How do we protect individuals from scams fueled by realistic synthetic media?

Ultimately, we must ask.  Where do we draw the line, and who holds the authority to draw it? As AI technology becomes so advanced that its capabilities become both a strength and a vulnerability to humanity, establishing clear boundaries, regulations, and safeguards becomes critical.”
De philosopher DJ Kyos