"ICE Agent Who Killed Renee Good's Car Unmasked - But Not Because AI Can"
A shocking video of an ICE agent shooting and killing 37-year-old Renee Good in Minneapolis on Wednesday has raised more questions than answers. The agent, who remains unidentified, can be seen shooting at Good's car in three separate viral videos. But instead of using AI to unmask the agent, internet sleuths only made things worse.
The problem? AI tools can't accurately remove an ICE agent's face mask from a video. Social media users on platforms like X started asking AI chatbot Grok to unmask the agent, but the result was a fake image created by unknown AI tools that spread widely across many networks.
One such fake image showed Good in her car before the shooting, with a woman sitting in the passenger's seat - a clear misrepresentation of the facts. Another AI-generated image put Good in a bikini, mirroring the activity of the AI chatbot making non-consensual sexualized images of women and young girls.
Meanwhile, an X user took a screenshot of Good slumped over lifeless in her car and told Grok to put her in a bikini, highlighting the dangers of relying on AI as an investigative tool. The image didn't show anyone behind the wheel, with the woman supposedly trying to represent Good sitting in the driver's seat.
In reality, Good was simply dropping off her son at school when she got caught up in the middle of the ICE incident. A report from the Associated Press suggests there is no evidence that Good was some kind of left-wing radical who justified her killing.
It's not just internet sleuths who are to blame - misinformation and speculation are also spreading on social media, with anchor Greg Kelly suggesting the stickers on the back of Good's car were somehow suspicious. The truth? Those stickers are from National Parks.
The whole ordeal has sparked outrage over Trump-era federal authorities terrorizing communities with deadly force at their direction. As one user put it: "TOTALLY JUSTIFIED SHOOTING!!!!!! NOT EVEN CLOSE!!!"
In the end, the real question is not who the ICE agent is, but why we continue to rely on flawed AI tools as investigative assistants. As AI expert Steve Grove points out, these fake images are currently going viral and causing harm.
"AI canβt do that," he said in a statement. "It just introduces flaws, not creating a clearer picture."
A shocking video of an ICE agent shooting and killing 37-year-old Renee Good in Minneapolis on Wednesday has raised more questions than answers. The agent, who remains unidentified, can be seen shooting at Good's car in three separate viral videos. But instead of using AI to unmask the agent, internet sleuths only made things worse.
The problem? AI tools can't accurately remove an ICE agent's face mask from a video. Social media users on platforms like X started asking AI chatbot Grok to unmask the agent, but the result was a fake image created by unknown AI tools that spread widely across many networks.
One such fake image showed Good in her car before the shooting, with a woman sitting in the passenger's seat - a clear misrepresentation of the facts. Another AI-generated image put Good in a bikini, mirroring the activity of the AI chatbot making non-consensual sexualized images of women and young girls.
Meanwhile, an X user took a screenshot of Good slumped over lifeless in her car and told Grok to put her in a bikini, highlighting the dangers of relying on AI as an investigative tool. The image didn't show anyone behind the wheel, with the woman supposedly trying to represent Good sitting in the driver's seat.
In reality, Good was simply dropping off her son at school when she got caught up in the middle of the ICE incident. A report from the Associated Press suggests there is no evidence that Good was some kind of left-wing radical who justified her killing.
It's not just internet sleuths who are to blame - misinformation and speculation are also spreading on social media, with anchor Greg Kelly suggesting the stickers on the back of Good's car were somehow suspicious. The truth? Those stickers are from National Parks.
The whole ordeal has sparked outrage over Trump-era federal authorities terrorizing communities with deadly force at their direction. As one user put it: "TOTALLY JUSTIFIED SHOOTING!!!!!! NOT EVEN CLOSE!!!"
In the end, the real question is not who the ICE agent is, but why we continue to rely on flawed AI tools as investigative assistants. As AI expert Steve Grove points out, these fake images are currently going viral and causing harm.
"AI canβt do that," he said in a statement. "It just introduces flaws, not creating a clearer picture."