We heard Obama insult Donald Trump, we saw the Pope in a white coat or Biden's tongue, but none of this was true.
These techniques, known as deepfakes, are manipulated videos, images or voices created by artificial intelligence software.
They seem real and it is almost impossible to distinguish them, but the most real threat of artificial intelligence is not putting different voices or faces on politicians, but rather the false sexual images to which the faces of famous women like Taylor Swift or Rosalía are put, but also anonymous like the teenagers from Almendralejo.
In the video that heads this news, the mother of one of them, Miriam Al Adib, together with the psychologist Bárbara Zorrilla and the president of the Social and Ethical Impact of AI Observatory, Idoia Salazar, analyze how artificial intelligence is becoming another threat against women.