BBC Wildlife Presenter Caught Up In AI Scam
29.04.2024 - 11:39
/ deadline.com
A well-known BBC wildlife presenter has been caught up in a scam that saw a fake AI-generated program mimic her voice and give permission for her face to be used in an advert.
Liz Bonnin and her management team noticed last week that the presenter of Our Changing Planet and Arctic From Above was fronting a poster for insect repellent spray, which neither her nor management had signed off.
On closer investigation, the voice messages supposedly from Bonnin that had confirmed she was happy to appear in the advert were revealed to be AI-generated.
“At the very beginning it does sound like me but then I sound a bit Australian and then it’s definitely an English woman by the end,” Bonnin, who is Irish, told The Guardian, which broke the story. “It’s all fragmented and there’s no cadence to it.”
The Guardian revealed that the company that produced the advert, Incognito, was sent a number of voice messages by someone its CEO thought was Bonnin, and that Incognito had previously sought Bonnin’s endorsement before being approached by a Facebook profile adopting her identity. The company paid an account given to them by the fake Bonnin and her image — which has now been retracted — appeared several days later on the advert.
Incognito CEO Howard Carter claimed to The Guardian he did not get the deal signed off through Bonnin’s management agency because the person impersonating her said “she was doing us a favor, provided we do it direct with her and not involve her main agency.” Deadline understands Carter and Bonnin had met several times in the past. Carter confirmed the AI mix-up to Deadline.
“Essentially theft”
Deep fakes such as the one used to trick Incognito are “essentially theft,” a rep for Bonnin told Deadline.
“It is
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