In recent days, everyone, from government agencies to celebrities, professional sports teams, has jumped on the last artificial intelligence-Generate orienteusing programs like Cat To create an image of themselves in Barbie-type plastic packaging.
However, technology experts warn that the light trend has certain risks, ranging from potentially inviting cyber-escroqueries to the increase in ethics and sustainability problems.
Participants in the trend often generate images with elements referring to various aspects of their lives, whether they live, what they do in life or a favorite hobby. This type of disclosure could help the crooks to deceive people all over the line.
“The fact that you show up to people:” Here are the three or four things that interest me most at this stage “and sharing it in the world, it becomes a very big risk, because now people can target you,” said Dave Chronister, CEO of parameter safety of the Cybersecurity Society, said HuffPost. “Social engineering attacks today are always the simplest and most popular means for attackers to target you as an employee and you as an individual.”
Jennifer King, a member of the Privacy and Data Policy at the Stanford University Institute for Human Centered Artificial Intelligence, added in an interview with the point of sale that users should consider that their images will probably go to the formation of future AI models, the same tools being more and more integrated in business and military applications.
Others have urged users to be carefully incorporating brand materials into their action figures.

“Mattel is known to actively apply the protections against their notes,” said lawyer Charles Gallagher said Fox13. “Having a barbie logo on your action character would probably be something you don’t want to have.”
Faced with the same action figurine, some have sought to remind the public of the energy and water of enormous needs necessary to feed the advanced computers which feed the models of AI.
“Chatgpt Barbie represents a triple threat to our privacy, our culture and our planet”, Professor Gina Neff by Queen Mary University London said In an interview with BBC.