-
Japan rides box office boom into Cannes
-
Trump arrives in China for superpower summit with Xi
-
UK's Catherine on first official foreign trip since cancer diagnosis
-
British scientists among winners of top Spanish award
-
Mbappe can show 'commitment' to Real Madrid: Arbeloa
-
Chinese tech giant Alibaba posts profit drop amid AI drive
-
King Charles lays out Starmer's agenda as PM fights for survival
-
Japan suspend Eddie Jones for verbally abusing officials
-
England drop Crawley for 1st Test against New Zealand
-
Stocks rise ahead of US-China summit as Iran talks stall
-
One trip, one ticket: New EU rules aim to ease train travel
-
SoftBank profit quadruples to $32 bn on AI investments
-
Africa must drop 'victim mentality': mogul Tony Elumelu
-
'Ungovernable' Britain? Once-stable politics in freefall
-
China tech giant Tencent sees Q1 profit jump after AI bets
-
Nissan expects return to profit after huge loss
-
World Cup broadcast deadlock ends up in Indian court
-
Asian stocks mixed on US-Iran impasse, AI setbacks
-
Besieged Starmer seeks to heal Labour divisions in King's Speech
-
After winter storms, fires now threaten Portugal's forests
-
Philippine senator seeks military support to block ICC drug war arrest
-
UK's Catherine on first official foreign trip since cancer revelation
-
'Short of blue-collar workers': Ukraine's battle for labour
-
'Don't understand it, but it looks fun': cricket bowls Japan over
-
Trump vows to push Xi to 'open up' China at superpower summit
-
Poor planning fuels Bangladesh contraceptive crisis
-
Fugitive financier sought in Malaysian fund scandal seeks Trump's pardon
-
World Cup comes to 'Soccer Town USA,' but locals priced out
-
Don't mention the war: Tucson prepares to welcome Team Iran for World Cup
-
Hosting World Cup evokes powerful memories for Mexico, and raises expectations
-
AI rivalry overshadows push for guardrails at Xi-Trump talks: experts
-
Asian stocks fall on US-Iran impasse, AI setbacks
-
Wembanyama leads Spurs to brink as Timberwolves routed
-
Ronaldo left waiting for Saudi title after goalkeeping gaffe
-
'Not my son's fault': The women bearing the children of Sudan's war rapes
-
'I applied to be pope': Losing grip on reality while using ChatGPT
-
EU to ease train travel with one journey, one ticket rules
-
Quick bowler Brown left out of Australia T20 World Cup squad
-
Los Angeles stadium undergoes World Cup facelift
-
Pacific nation Nauru to change name in break from colonial past
-
Messi still highest-paid player in MLS
-
Musk 'wanted 90%' of OpenAI, Altman tells feisty tech titan trial
-
Paramount defends Warner bid amid California probe
-
Agnete Kirk Kristiansen Appointed Chair of the LEGO Foundation
-
Blister worry hits McIlroy as PGA start looms at Aronimink
-
Tens of thousands demonstrate in Argentina over Milei university cuts
-
Ex-NBA player Jason Collins dies after brain cancer battle
-
Foot blister forces McIlroy to cut short PGA practice round
-
Man City boss Guardiola urges players to make VAR irrelevant
-
Favourites Finland, Israel through at Eurovision semis
Japan town retracts latest AI bear image
A Japanese town deleted a social media post warning of a bear sighting after discovering that a picture it had received showing the fearsome creature was AI-generated.
Similar fake images have been circulating online as fear of bears runs high in the country, where the animals have killed a record 13 people this year.
"The town prioritised informing residents to avoid danger, but we apologise for causing any anxiety or confusion," the northern town of Onagawa said on its official X account on Wednesday.
The image created with artificial intelligence showed a bear roaming around a residential area at night.
"We will take this experience as a lesson, and will strive to improve the accuracy and speed of our future information dissemination," the town said.
But residents still "need to continue exercising utmost caution regarding bear sightings".
An official in Onagawa told AFP on Thursday that the town had received the bear picture from a well-meaning company president on Wednesday morning.
"There had been reports of a bear sighting in a different district of the town over the weekend, that we warned of over disaster prevention radio, so we didn't have much doubt" about the image, he said.
The town posted the image on X quickly on Wednesday morning, because the alleged sighting was near a nursery school, the official said.
Schoolchildren in the town were told to commute in a group or use school buses, while nursery school preschool children refrained from playing outside.
At the same time, "we were checking with different apps if the image was genuine or fake", said the official, who requested anonymity.
"One analysis showed the possibility was high that it was AI-generated, while the other said the possibility of AI was low," he said, highlighting the difficulty of spotting increasingly realistic-looking AI images.
- Image created for fun -
It emerged that the image was originally created by a company employee for fun, but one of his colleagues believed it was real and reported it to the boss.
The town retracted its post with the image on Wednesday afternoon, after being contacted by the person who created the AI image, the official said.
It is not the only AI-generated image that has gained traction in Japan as anxiety grows over bear attacks.
There has been a steady flow of genuine reports of bears entering homes, roaming near schools and rampaging in supermarkets, especially in rural northern regions.
When reporters at the Yomiuri Shimbun national daily searched for the words "bear" and "video" on TikTok, they found that around 60 percent of 100 clips analysed were fake.
Some of them had been produced using OpenAI's video generation tool Sora, the newspaper said this month.
The fake videos included one in which an old woman fed apples to a bear, and another in which an unarmed high school student fended off a bear with her bare hands.
Another showed a bear making off with a dog in its jaws.
Some of them had been watched hundreds of thousands of times, the report said.
I.Matar--SF-PST