The Japan Times - 'Fueling sexism': AI 'bikini interview' videos flood internet

EUR -
AED 4.358686
AFN 77.145243
ALL 96.636973
AMD 452.900547
ANG 2.124546
AOA 1088.336435
ARS 1725.464149
AUD 1.707235
AWG 2.139287
AZN 2.013799
BAM 1.955354
BBD 2.406161
BDT 145.986713
BGN 1.993151
BHD 0.450405
BIF 3539.352612
BMD 1.186844
BND 1.512981
BOB 8.255118
BRL 6.245411
BSD 1.194492
BTN 109.70591
BWP 15.629658
BYN 3.402638
BYR 23262.149846
BZD 2.402662
CAD 1.618648
CDF 2688.202567
CHF 0.917039
CLF 0.026071
CLP 1029.433075
CNY 8.250645
CNH 8.248248
COP 4355.422163
CRC 591.57508
CUC 1.186844
CUP 31.451376
CVE 110.240328
CZK 24.360569
DJF 212.73239
DKK 7.467503
DOP 75.214117
DZD 154.438388
EGP 55.90725
ERN 17.802666
ETB 185.585211
FJD 2.616576
FKP 0.866911
GBP 0.867168
GEL 3.19856
GGP 0.866911
GHS 13.087071
GIP 0.866911
GMD 86.639448
GNF 10482.786402
GTQ 9.162988
GYD 249.935117
HKD 9.268638
HNL 31.532341
HRK 7.53326
HTG 156.346985
HUF 381.685626
IDR 19929.431485
ILS 3.66783
IMP 0.866911
INR 109.139241
IQD 1565.043144
IRR 49995.819691
ISK 144.996819
JEP 0.866911
JMD 187.210468
JOD 0.841466
JPY 184.045735
KES 154.23072
KGS 103.78971
KHR 4803.985566
KMF 492.540492
KPW 1068.159944
KRW 1728.763412
KWD 0.364266
KYD 0.995565
KZT 600.827939
LAK 25709.354463
LBP 106980.457386
LKR 369.447316
LRD 215.332715
LSL 18.968635
LTL 3.504443
LVL 0.71791
LYD 7.496322
MAD 10.836529
MDL 20.093588
MGA 5338.805156
MKD 61.625948
MMK 2492.763063
MNT 4232.739691
MOP 9.606809
MRU 47.666934
MUR 53.894966
MVR 18.34888
MWK 2071.536383
MXN 20.742444
MYR 4.678488
MZN 75.673253
NAD 18.968315
NGN 1657.879276
NIO 43.960717
NOK 11.448953
NPR 175.530934
NZD 1.971295
OMR 0.457938
PAB 1.194628
PEN 3.994189
PGK 5.113942
PHP 69.865996
PKR 334.192385
PLN 4.215357
PYG 8002.209077
QAR 4.355625
RON 5.095363
RSD 117.373237
RUB 90.539571
RWF 1743.046616
SAR 4.451618
SBD 9.556012
SCR 17.136845
SDG 713.89198
SEK 10.574663
SGD 1.508331
SHP 0.890441
SLE 28.870014
SLL 24887.532355
SOS 682.755826
SRD 45.160023
STD 24565.282435
STN 24.494931
SVC 10.452529
SYP 13125.994308
SZL 18.96052
THB 37.452649
TJS 11.152051
TMT 4.153955
TND 3.432432
TOP 2.857636
TRY 51.635564
TTD 8.111185
TWD 37.507823
TZS 3076.276554
UAH 51.202541
UGX 4271.044125
USD 1.186844
UYU 46.360015
UZS 14604.669895
VES 410.578618
VND 30777.24846
VUV 140.986971
WST 3.217275
XAF 655.824039
XAG 0.014548
XAU 0.000252
XCD 3.207506
XCG 2.153009
XDR 0.815617
XOF 655.810227
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.854672
ZAR 19.202781
ZMK 10683.018904
ZMW 23.444753
ZWL 382.163406
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    1.3800

    83.78

    +1.65%

  • BCC

    0.5100

    80.81

    +0.63%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.76

    +0.21%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.05

    -0.17%

  • BTI

    0.4600

    60.68

    +0.76%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    91.03

    -4.5%

  • AZN

    0.1800

    92.77

    +0.19%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    25.86

    +1.43%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    35.8

    -1.03%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    13.08

    +1.07%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.65

    -0.41%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    85.27

    +0.23%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    37.88

    -0.42%

  • GSK

    0.9400

    51.6

    +1.82%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4300

    16

    -2.69%

'Fueling sexism': AI 'bikini interview' videos flood internet
'Fueling sexism': AI 'bikini interview' videos flood internet / Photo: Oliver Contreras - AFP

'Fueling sexism': AI 'bikini interview' videos flood internet

The videos are strikingly lifelike, featuring bikini-clad women conducting street interviews and eliciting lewd comments -- but they are entirely fake, generated by AI tools increasingly used to flood social media with sexist content.

Text size:

Such AI slop -- mass-produced content created by cheap artificial intelligence tools that turn simple text prompts into hyper-realistic visuals -- is frequently drowning out authentic posts and blurring the line between fiction and reality.

The trend has spawned a cottage industry of AI influencers churning out large volumes of sexualized clips with minimal effort, often driven by platform incentive programs that financially reward viral content.

Hordes of AI clips, laden with locker-room humor, purport to show scantily clad female interviewers on the streets of India or the United Kingdom -- sparking concern about the harm such synthetic content may pose to women.

AFP's fact-checkers traced hundreds of such videos on Instagram, many in Hindi, that purportedly show male interviewees casually delivering misogynistic punchlines and sexualized remarks -- sometimes even grabbing the women -- while crowds of men gawk or laugh in the background.

Many videos racked up tens of millions of views -- and some further monetized that traction by promoting an adult chat app to "make new female friends."

The fabricated clips were so lifelike that some users in the comments questioned whether the featured women were real.

A sample of these videos analyzed by the US cybersecurity firm GetReal Security showed they were created using Google's Veo 3 AI generator, known for hyper-realistic visuals.

- 'Gendered harm' -

"Misogyny that usually stayed hidden in locker room chats and groups is now being dressed up as AI visuals," Nirali Bhatia, an India-based cyber psychologist, told AFP.

"This is part of AI-mediated gendered harm," she said, adding that the trend was "fueling sexism."

The trend offers a window into an internet landscape now increasingly swamped with AI-generated memes, videos and images that are competing for attention with -- and increasingly eclipsing -- authentic content.

"AI slop and any type of unlabeled AI-generated content slowly chips away at the little trust that remains in visual content," GetReal Security's Emmanuelle Saliba told AFP.

The most viral misogynistic content often relies on shock value -- including Instagram and TikTok clips that Wired magazine said were generated using Veo 3 and portray Black women as big-footed primates.

Videos on one popular TikTok account mockingly list what so-called gold-digging "girls gone wild" would do for money.

Women are also fodder for distressing AI-driven clickbait, with AFP's fact-checkers tracking viral videos of a fake marine trainer named "Jessica Radcliffe" being fatally attacked by an orca during a live show at a water park.

The fabricated footage rapidly spread across platforms including TikTok, Facebook and X, sparking global outrage from users who believed the woman was real.

- 'Unreal' -

Last year, Alexios Mantzarlis, director of the Security, Trust, and Safety Initiative at Cornell Tech, found 900 Instagram accounts of likely AI-generated "models" -- predominantly female and typically scantily clothed.

These thirst traps cumulatively amassed 13 million followers and posted more than 200,000 images, typically monetizing their reach by redirecting their audiences to commercial content-sharing platforms.

With AI fakery proliferating online, "the numbers now are undoubtedly much larger," Mantzarlis told AFP.

"Expect more nonsense content leveraging body standards that are not just unrealistic but literally unreal," he added.

Financially incentivized slop is becoming increasingly challenging to police as content creators -- including students and stay-at-home parents around the world -- turn to AI video production as gig work.

Many creators on YouTube and TikTok offer paid courses on how to monetize viral AI-generated material on platforms, many of which have reduced their reliance on human fact-checkers and scaled back content moderation.

Some platforms have sought to crack down on accounts promoting slop, with YouTube recently saying that creators of "inauthentic" and "mass produced" content would be ineligible for monetization.

"AI doesn't invent misogyny -- it just reflects and amplifies what's already there," AI consultant Divyendra Jadoun told AFP.

"If audiences reward this kind of content with millions of likes, the algorithms and AI creators will keep producing it. The bigger fight isn't just technological -- it's social and cultural."

burs-ac/st

T.Kobayashi--JT