logo
G20 leaders have a role to play in the media's fight against deepfakes

G20 leaders have a role to play in the media's fight against deepfakes

News243 days ago

There is a troubling scourge of deepfakes, which impact on the media and need the attention of the G20 writes Sbu Ngalwa.
Not much happens in Polokwane – save for that odd day when the Peter Mokaba Stadium plays host to a Premier Soccer League home game, and then suddenly, the town comes alive.
The last time Polokwane likely welcomed international visitors from diverse nationalities was in June 2010, during the Soccer World Cup.
But I digress.
In the Limpopo capital earlier this month, senior government officials, international organisations, civil society and technocrats from G20 countries gathered for the third meeting of the Digital Economy Working Group (DEWG).
The DEWG is one of 15 working groups participating in a series of meetings focused on topics relevant to the G20. Inputs from these meetings contribute to the G20 summit agenda and may be incorporated into the final G20 Leaders' Declaration after the South African-hosted summit in November 2025.
Troubling scourge of deepfakes
Therefore, working group discussions have the potential to make it onto the agenda of the leaders of countries that hold over 85% of the global GDP. This is by far the most powerful bloc of global nations, and South Africa holds the G20 presidency this year and will hand over the baton to the United States for 2026.
The G20 needs to be inclusive in its deliberations, considerations, and ultimately, decisions. Fortunately, civil society is involved in some of the Sherpa streams.
The DEWG invited me to provide input on behalf of the SA National Editors' Forum (Sanef) and, by extension, the African Editors Forum (TAEF) on the troubling scourge of deepfakes and their impact on the media.
Deepfakes involve the digital manipulation of videos/images to appear to show the targeted person's face, body or voice. The intention is to mislead and spread false information.
SABC Morning Live presenter Leanne Manas is among the victims. Her image was used to promote an online trading platform. As a result, she needed security to escort her to work, where victims of scams travelled to the SABC to 'confront' her.
The Polokwane meeting provided an opportunity to highlight the media's role in fighting misinformation and disinformation and also to appeal to the G20 nations to involve the media in their collective response against deepfakes and other efforts to promote information integrity.
The mainstream media has been at the forefront of exposing deepfakes and informing the public about this dangerous assault on the truth.
In May, News24 exposed the hijacking of local websites for the nefarious purposes of spreading fake stories about the country. Through its fact-checking desk, News24 revealed how a digital marketing agency based in India was buying expired domains of South African websites and using them to publish fake AI-generated stories. This included a report about plans by the City of Cape Town to introduce a traffic congestion tax.
In a country burdened by growing inequality, an increase in the fuel levy and the recent political uproar over the government's failed attempt to increase VAT, such a story would not only gain traction online, but also offend many people. That's how convincing some of these stories are.
Thankfully, it was quickly debunked, as the City also issued a statement denying that such a tax was in the pipeline.
Danger of the new weapons
Another fake story presented bogus documents about new load shedding scenarios and yet another purported change in social security grants.
Besides impersonating journalists in deepfake scams, sexually humiliating imagery of our colleagues, designed to intimidate and discredit, is also concocted.
Importantly, though, the News24 report demonstrates how journalism serves as an antidote, bringing to light the immense dangers of these new weapons.
The media is already besieged by powerful political and economic interests for whom certain truths are inconvenient. On top of this, we now face the onslaught of deepfakes, which also causes harm to political and business leaders, celebrities, and indeed ordinary people (especially women and girls, and people investing their personal savings).
While we appreciate G20 countries addressing the issue, we caution against the use of overly broad laws and regulations that, under the guise of criminalising deepfakes, may effectively suppress public interest journalism.
As media organisations, Sanef and Media Monitoring Africa are discussing these issues in a parallel process to the G20, dubbed the M20. Building on the pioneering decisions on information integrity made during Brazil's G20 Presidency last year, this independent initiative aims to sustain momentum and ensure continued engagement throughout 2025 - and beyond.
Support for media freedom
To play our part in the common fight against deepfakes, we need the G20 to show genuine support for media freedom and editorial independence.
Back in Polokwane, Minister of Communications and Digital Technologies Solly Matlatsi's comments were therefore welcomed when he assured that government was looking at evolving capabilities of generative AI and risks posed by deepfakes, and that it was 'an issue of growing concern for information integrity and public trust'.
- Sbu Ngalwa is acting secretary-general of The African Editors' Forum (TAEF, treasurer-general of the SA National Editors' Forum (Sanef) and a member of the local M20 organising committee.
For more information about the M20 initiative, visit the website, or contact the M20 secretariat.
*Want to respond to the columnist? Send your letter or article to opinions@news24.com with your name and town or province. You are welcome to also send a profile picture. We encourage a diversity of voices and views in our readers' submissions and reserve the right not to publish any and all submissions received.
Disclaimer: News24 encourages freedom of speech and the expression of diverse views. The views of columnists published on News24 are therefore their own and do not necessarily represent the views of News24.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Charlize Theron Fears ‘Millions of People…Are Going to Die' Because of Foreign Aid Cuts
Charlize Theron Fears ‘Millions of People…Are Going to Die' Because of Foreign Aid Cuts

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Charlize Theron Fears ‘Millions of People…Are Going to Die' Because of Foreign Aid Cuts

Charlize Theron delivered fired up remarks Saturday about immigration, LGBTQ and women's rights and the devastating cuts to foreign aid. 'The world feels like it's burning because it is,' the Oscar winner said at the fifth annual Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Program Block Party on the Universal lot. 'Here in Los Angeles, in the US and across the globe, we are moving backwards fast. Immigration policy is destroying the lives of families, not criminals. Women's rights are becoming less and less every day, queer and trans lives are increasingly being erased, and gender-based violence is on the rise. This isn't just policy, it's personal. Fuck them.' More from Variety Katy O'Brian Says Sydney Sweeney 'Didn't Care' About Getting Hurt During Fight Scenes in Christy Martin Biopic: 'She Was Like, "If You Break My Nose, That's Fine"' Emma Stone on Working With Joaquin Phoenix in 'Eddington' and That Viral Bee Incident With Pedro Pascal and Austin Butler at Cannes Bob the Drag Queen Launches Production Company Purse First Studios (EXCLUSIVE) She continued, 'Foreign aid cuts brought HIV and AIDS programs in my home country of South Africa to an absolute standstill. All of this is not just detrimental, it's dangerous. People will lose their lives. Many have already unfortunately and at a frightening rate. It's absolutely heartbreaking to see this kind of unnecessary suffering.' Theron did not mention Pres. Trump by name but his administration has made cutting foreign aid a core part of its agenda. But Theron said she is not without hope. 'What we also see, what we cannot miss, is the resistance,' she said. 'There is hope, there is power in all of us standing up, organizing, protesting, voting and caring for each other, and refusing to accept that this is the new normal. That spirit of resistance, justice and care for each other, that's the spirit that drives the work at CTAOP. Although our focus is on the youth in southern Africa, what we're really talking about here tonight is that all lives should be valued. Everyone should have the right to be healthy and safe and should be able to be seen.' Theron launched CTAOP 18 years ago to support young people living in her native South Africa. To date, CTAOP-supported programs have reached more than 4.5 million youth and granted $15 million to organizations in southern Africa. Earlier in the evening, on the red carpet, Theron told me, 'It's quite devastating what's going to happen…It's less than one percent of this budget that everyone is talking about and when you compare that to the millions of people that are going to die because of this, it's devastating. It does feel like this event is a little more important than it was last year.' Theron says she regularly lobbies elected officials. 'We do it quite a bit,' she said, adding, 'I will say there are a lot of people who do pick up the phone and are willing to listen and are on our side of understanding.' The evening also included a live auction of luxury products and experiences as well as a performance by Reneé Rapp. Best of Variety Emmy Predictions: All 118 Categories Updated as Voting Opens With Tight Races and Major Shakeups 25 Hollywood Legends Who Deserve an Honorary Oscar Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival

South Africa's DA Stays in Coalition; to Boycott Dialogue
South Africa's DA Stays in Coalition; to Boycott Dialogue

Bloomberg

time15 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

South Africa's DA Stays in Coalition; to Boycott Dialogue

South Africa's fractious coalition government survived after the second-largest party opted against leaving following its ultimatum to President Cyril Ramaphosa for firing one of its members from his executive, while saying it will boycott his national dialogue. Ramaphosa set up a panel that includes business leaders, actors and the captain of its national rugby team to guide the talks on the country's development path amid a weak economy. The project is set to cost about 740 million rand ($42 million).

Denmark's Plan to Fight Deepfakes: Give Citizens Copyright to Their Own Likeness
Denmark's Plan to Fight Deepfakes: Give Citizens Copyright to Their Own Likeness

Gizmodo

time15 hours ago

  • Gizmodo

Denmark's Plan to Fight Deepfakes: Give Citizens Copyright to Their Own Likeness

Here's a weird potential future: When you're born, you are issued a birth certificate, a social security card, and a copyright. That possibility is emerging in Denmark, where officials are considering changes to the nation's copyright laws to provide citizens with a right to their own likeness as a means of combating AI-generated deepfakes, according to The Guardian. The proposal, advanced by the Danish Ministry of Culture and expected for a parliamentary vote this fall, would grant Danish citizens copyright control over their own image, facial features, and voice. This protection would, in theory, allow Danes to demand that online platforms remove deepfakes and other digital manipulations that were shared without their consent. It would also cover 'realistic, digitally generated imitations' of an artist's performance without consent, so no AI-generated versions of your favorite artists' songs would be allowed. In addition to granting copyright protections to people, the proposed amendment would establish 'severe fines' for any tech platform that does not comply with the law and respond to requests for takedown. The person who is impersonated in the deepfake could also seek compensation. 'In the bill we agree and are sending an unequivocal message that everybody has the right to their own body, their own voice and their own facial features, which is apparently not how the current law is protecting people against generative AI,' Danish culture minister, Jakob Engel-Schmidt, told The Guardian. 'Human beings can be run through the digital copy machine and be misused for all sorts of purposes and I'm not willing to accept that.' Denmark is far from the only nation taking action on deepfakes. Earlier this year, the United States passed the Take It Down Act, a much more narrowly defined bill that gives people the right to request that platforms take down nonconsensually shared sexually explicit images of them—though some activists have argued that the law is ill-defined and could be weaponized by those acting in bad faith.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store