46 comments

  • _fw 2 hours ago

    Are you trying to tell me, in this the year of our lord 2026, somebody has been (rightfully or wrongfully) arrested for literally ‘crying wolf’?

    There’s something hilariously poetic about a ~2,500 year old fable being relevant today, because of AI.

    • lukan an hour ago

      No, not really. There was a real wolf and the person dusturbed the operation.

      "South Korean police have arrested a man for sharing an AI-generated image that misled authorities who were searching for a wolf that had broken out of a zoo in Daejeon city.

      The 40-year-old unnamed man is accused of disrupting the search by creating and distributing a fake photo purporting to show Neukgu, the wolf, trotting down a road intersection"

      • sillysaurusx an hour ago

        But there are real wolves when shepherding too. That’s why crying wolf has any power.

        To cry wolf is to say there’s a wolf here when it’s actually located elsewhere. The AI photo said there was a wolf at a certain intersection when it was actually located elsewhere.

        In fact crying wolf is doubly appropriate because it means disturbing an operation looking for a wolf.

        • psychoslave an hour ago

          The biggest difference now is wolf is actually sought to protect him¹ from the crowd of the super-predators in town, so they can "give him a calm environment for recovery".

          ¹ Following pronoun variant used in the fine article here.

        • croes an hour ago

          Crying wolf is normally starting the operation while there isn‘t a wolf.

          This is misdirection while there is a wolf

          Similar but different

          • weird-eye-issue 27 minutes ago

            That's completely pedantic and besides it's false because there literally wasn't a wolf there where he faked the photo in the first place

          • heliumtera 3 minutes ago

            le reddit mentality

      • PUSH_AX 26 minutes ago

        > the person dusturbed the operation

        Did they? The article says it's unclear as to their intent.

        > Authorities did not specify if the man had intentionally sent the photo to authorities during their search or simply shared it online.

      • pj_mukh 24 minutes ago

        If this was America there would be 20 think pieces in the Atlantic about how AI is ruining our culture and no one would get arrested.

      • moron4hire 16 minutes ago

        There was a real wolf in "The Boy Who Cried Wolf", too.

    • hansmayer 22 minutes ago

      The fable was always relevant, afaic it is still a part of the curriculums. It's also a nice illustration of how LLMs screw up everything they touch - and please don't serve me the old "guns don't kill people - people kill people" argument over this.

      • unsupp0rted 9 minutes ago

        > It's also a nice illustration of how LLMs screw up everything they touch

        And you'll be shocked what the kids have been doing with databases and API calls

      • grosswait 10 minutes ago

        Is there a reason you felt the need to slip this non sequitur in your reply?

    • Razengan 37 minutes ago

      > somebody has been (rightfully or wrongfully) arrested for literally ‘crying wolf’?

      Willfully diverting limited public service resources, that might potentially be assigned to saving someone's life or health?

      Practically a social DoS

      • littlestymaar 12 minutes ago

        Yeah, I really don't see the difference with false bomb alerts.

  • kqp an hour ago

    It sounds like he didn’t actually file a false police report. They don’t even say they asked him whether it’s true. It seems the police just read a post by a random person on the internet, assumed it’s true, then arrested him when it wasn’t. The article is devastatingly light on info, though, so I can’t be sure.

  • sigmoid10 an hour ago

    Title should be "Man arrested for deceptive and antisocial behavior".

    The only reason you are seeing this right now is because it has AI in the title.

    • latexr 2 minutes ago

      The technology used is very much relevant, because the ease of access and easiness of production are likely to have been the biggest contributors. Had they had to open and image editor and spend a few hours to make something convincing, they would’ve been much less likely to do so, assuming this particular person even had the skills, and would have had multiple opportunities to change their mind.

      It’s a crime of opportunity¹, one where you have the idea and act of it on a whim. No opportunity, no crime, and the technology provided the opportunity.

      So yes, the technology used matters.

      ¹ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_of_opportunity

    • maplethorpe 32 minutes ago

      Isn't the technology that enabled the deception noteworthy? Presumably this person wouldn't have been able to do this before AI.

      Hypothetically, if a hacking tool was released that let non-technical people hack into sensitive databases, and then a journalist wrote the headline "local man hacks IRS", without any mention of the tool, wouldn't that be a bit irresponsible, to purposely leave that information out?

      • tete 4 minutes ago

        > Presumably this person wouldn't have been able to do this before AI.

        Photoshop? I don't think you need much skill.

    • AussieWog93 an hour ago

      Yes, it's an interesting and novel thing about a topic many people here are interested in.

    • jamesnorden 41 minutes ago

      The one time the headline isn't misleading, you want it changed?

    • raincole 38 minutes ago

      Except the actual title here is clearer. Your suggestion is so anti-AI-clickbait that it overflew and became a bad title again.

      If Tesla (insert any car manufacturer you hate) ran over a kid I'd like to see the title say it, instead of "Tesla fined for violating traffic laws."

    • darkwater an hour ago

      Yes, and at the same time we should ask the question: would the intersection between "people who think this is a funny thing to do" and "people with the technical capabilities to actually generate something that misleads police" [1] return a value > 0 before GenAI?

      [1] waiting for some example where fool policemen where outsmarted with simple tricks /s

  • bblb 19 minutes ago

    How about not believing everything that's posted to the Internet. This could've easily been done with Photoshop in the pre AI era.

    • rwmj 7 minutes ago

      "easily" is doing some heavy lifting there. Is Photoshopping this image together really easier than prompting an AI?

  • pluc 32 minutes ago

    Get used to it, it's gonna keep happening since we're dumb enough to create a technology that mirrors reality with no safeguards whatsoever.

    • gmerc 28 minutes ago

      Oh actually penalizing people does help

      • kreco 18 minutes ago

        Penalizing people is slow and does not scale as much as AI creations that can be mass produced.

  • heddycrow 5 minutes ago

    It is, quite frankly, completely wrong that this man was arrested—if anything, by this line of reasoning, it should have been an artist instead—since AI, as we are told, merely makes copies of what hard-working human artists have already created and shared on the internet. AI is plagiarism—full stop—nothing more, nothing less.

    Of course, this point could have been made without sarcasm (and AI tells for parody)—I’m aware—but that would remove a certain… texture from the argument. And where, exactly, is the fun in that?

  • prmoustache 2 hours ago

    > Neukgu is part of a programme at O-World to restore the Korean wolf, which once roamed the Korean Peninsula but is now considered extinct in the wild.

    I don't understand, shouldn't they have let him go if the idea is that they still roam in the wild? Why forcing it back to a zoo?

    • spiffyk 2 hours ago

      Pretty sure if you let only a handful of individuals from an almost-extinct species roam around freely in an uncontrolled environment, chances are pretty high something is going to kill off them before they reproduce, hence why they are almost-extinct.

      The zoo provides a controlled environment needed to restore the species.

    • boodleboodle 13 minutes ago

      They live in a pretty big conservatory (korean link but you can see the pictures)

      https://m.wikitree.co.kr/articles/1132213

    • 05 an hour ago

      Maybe it’s because wolves are genetically dogs and will cross breed and the conservation program supposedly needs to increase the numbers of that particular breed and not just wolves/dogs in general?

  • christoff12 an hour ago

    I'm a little surprised zoo animals aren't chipped with some kind of beacon locator for incidents such as these.

    • ErroneousBosh an hour ago

      What sort of size do you think that would be?

      • Luc 16 minutes ago

        Small and low energy enough that tiny migratory birds can wear them for months. Externally worn of course (e.g. attached to the ear, for a wolf).

        You could adjust the firmware of a wildlife tag to start transmitting location every 10 minutes when the animal leaves a geo-fence.

      • chrisweekly an hour ago

        size of chip? they're tiny. dog owners typically have the vet "chip" their pet as a puppy. full-grown dog doesn't need a bigger chip.

        • codebje an hour ago

          Those chips need to be scanned from about 3cm away. If you want a locator tag, it needs to carry enough power to broadcast a signal a useful distance. Still, a microchip is handy if you're not sure if it's your tiger you found.

        • jannes an hour ago

          Those chips cannot track a dog's location

  • stingraycharles an hour ago

    South Korea has some very specific (and unusually harsh) laws around deepfakes. I was under the impression that it was only about impersonating people, but apparently it’s broader.

    • msh 44 minutes ago

      I think many places, even without specific deepfake laws, would prosecute someone who used a fake image to mislead the police.

  • sammy2255 15 minutes ago

    What is the charge?

  • antiloper 35 minutes ago

    Need this in the west as well

  • jonnonz an hour ago

    This is how the future will look!

  • Gigachad an hour ago

    IMO you should be legally required to disclose that a video has been AI generated when you share it.