Kanye West declares he's 'not a Nazi'
Scarlett Johansson, one of the celebrities depicted in the AI-generated video, has spoken out against the "misuse of AI."
The e-commerce platform found itself in an unenviable position thanks to Kanye West. Did it put things right? Kind of.
A commercial for the shirts aired in some local markets during the Super Bowl, days after the rapper and designer called himself a Nazi on social media. The website was taken down Tuesday.
The video uses AI to depict false images of Jewish celebrities opposing rapper Ye, who is selling Swastika T-shirts.
The creatives behind the fake video share the backstory. “It’s time to stop being silent and respond to antisemites like Kanye West in the strongest way possible.”
The website run by Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, is offline after selling swastika shirts. Shopify, the ecommerce platform, said the site violated its terms of service.
Ye used a local TV ad in Los Angeles to direct people to his website, where he is selling T-shirts emblazoned with swastikas.
Israeli grassroots Zionist organization Im Tirtzu posted a controversial deepfake video on Tuesday that depicted a stream of AI-generated Jewish artists including Drake, Lenny Kravitz, Maroon 5’s Adam Levine,
Experts in Jewish history and culture say we should be talking about Kanye West's antisemitism. That to be silent is to be complicit.
Scarlett Johansson is calling on the U.S. to outlaw misuse of AI after a deepfake video of her and other Jewish celebrities giving Kanye West, who is now officially known as Ye, a middle finger went viral on Instagram.
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