The Prague Post - As Ukraine battles for key city, pro-Russian accounts wage AI war

EUR -
AED 4.269213
AFN 76.713662
ALL 96.647502
AMD 443.068922
ANG 2.080637
AOA 1064.695494
ARS 1686.876988
AUD 1.773685
AWG 2.092196
AZN 1.926419
BAM 1.954272
BBD 2.340171
BDT 141.869096
BGN 1.955851
BHD 0.438204
BIF 3447.474841
BMD 1.162331
BND 1.504724
BOB 8.057701
BRL 6.222656
BSD 1.161892
BTN 104.023681
BWP 15.506878
BYN 3.372364
BYR 22781.694835
BZD 2.336773
CAD 1.625323
CDF 2558.291536
CHF 0.933997
CLF 0.027527
CLP 1079.875053
CNY 8.224134
CNH 8.217857
COP 4396.588144
CRC 572.15273
CUC 1.162331
CUP 30.801781
CVE 111.061064
CZK 24.157923
DJF 206.569813
DKK 7.468613
DOP 73.226705
DZD 151.35649
EGP 55.221901
ERN 17.434971
ETB 178.011089
FJD 2.638141
FKP 0.87802
GBP 0.878746
GEL 3.142751
GGP 0.87802
GHS 13.192373
GIP 0.87802
GMD 84.24032
GNF 10100.659837
GTQ 8.905039
GYD 243.079977
HKD 9.052644
HNL 30.598389
HRK 7.535161
HTG 151.941223
HUF 380.774645
IDR 19298.187721
ILS 3.787067
IMP 0.87802
INR 104.161105
IQD 1522.654094
IRR 48934.150529
ISK 148.336422
JEP 0.87802
JMD 186.374305
JOD 0.824071
JPY 180.594335
KES 150.463801
KGS 101.645888
KHR 4655.136722
KMF 493.99042
KPW 1046.098088
KRW 1707.824898
KWD 0.356696
KYD 0.968243
KZT 593.83578
LAK 25225.489348
LBP 104086.773638
LKR 358.509742
LRD 206.459145
LSL 19.899192
LTL 3.432062
LVL 0.703082
LYD 6.334461
MAD 10.771906
MDL 19.711591
MGA 5224.679303
MKD 61.576269
MMK 2440.684685
MNT 4133.801864
MOP 9.321113
MRU 46.202839
MUR 53.839139
MVR 17.897622
MWK 2018.969847
MXN 21.253514
MYR 4.801577
MZN 74.284362
NAD 19.899286
NGN 1681.603212
NIO 42.744719
NOK 11.76639
NPR 166.43789
NZD 2.025723
OMR 0.446924
PAB 1.161892
PEN 3.909498
PGK 4.931749
PHP 67.972558
PKR 326.045451
PLN 4.23027
PYG 8121.651051
QAR 4.232399
RON 5.087754
RSD 117.358248
RUB 90.332941
RWF 1687.123982
SAR 4.362168
SBD 9.566675
SCR 16.764351
SDG 699.132488
SEK 10.97557
SGD 1.505864
SHP 0.87205
SLE 26.686783
SLL 24373.505482
SOS 664.266658
SRD 44.789862
STD 24057.912603
STN 24.844833
SVC 10.166053
SYP 12853.56719
SZL 19.898783
THB 37.189373
TJS 10.729912
TMT 4.079783
TND 3.420451
TOP 2.798615
TRY 49.305053
TTD 7.875843
TWD 36.500116
TZS 2863.152247
UAH 49.224079
UGX 4182.730229
USD 1.162331
UYU 46.214668
UZS 13884.048338
VES 285.192641
VND 30650.678204
VUV 141.612824
WST 3.260368
XAF 655.444618
XAG 0.019849
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.141259
XCG 2.093963
XDR 0.817073
XOF 656.717528
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.984576
ZAR 19.845506
ZMK 10462.370199
ZMW 26.636178
ZWL 374.270227
  • CMSC

    -0.1255

    23.335

    -0.54%

  • SCS

    0.1050

    16.395

    +0.64%

  • NGG

    -0.2800

    75.83

    -0.37%

  • BTI

    -0.5250

    58.135

    -0.9%

  • BCC

    -0.2700

    75.75

    -0.36%

  • RIO

    0.3850

    72.335

    +0.53%

  • GSK

    -0.4700

    47.39

    -0.99%

  • RYCEF

    0.1900

    13.8

    +1.38%

  • JRI

    0.0010

    13.801

    +0.01%

  • CMSD

    -0.0250

    23.295

    -0.11%

  • AZN

    -1.9900

    90.74

    -2.19%

  • BCE

    -0.0850

    23.425

    -0.36%

  • RBGPF

    -0.3200

    76

    -0.42%

  • RELX

    -0.4250

    39.785

    -1.07%

  • BP

    0.3300

    36.43

    +0.91%

  • VOD

    -0.3050

    12.165

    -2.51%

As Ukraine battles for key city, pro-Russian accounts wage AI war
As Ukraine battles for key city, pro-Russian accounts wage AI war / Photo: OLIVIER DOULIERY - AFP

As Ukraine battles for key city, pro-Russian accounts wage AI war

Fighting for control of Pokrovsk in Ukraine's east is raging on, but in pro-Russian social media circles, Moscow has already won: viral, AI-generated videos depict a Ukrainian army in retreat, complete with fake, tearful soldiers.

Text size:

Russia has been trying to capture the logistics hub in the eastern Donetsk region for more than a year, intensifying its assault in recent weeks and closing in on its outskirts in a pincer-shaped movement, according to battlefield maps published by the Institute for the Study of War.

Although the battle continues, a series of viral social media posts tell a different story: dozens of AI-generated videos of Ukrainian soldiers surrendering their weapons or weeping on their way to the front circulated on social media in November, clocking up millions of views.

The fake videos are part of a "broader narrative that we've seen since the beginning of the invasion, with (Ukrainian President Volodymyr) Zelensky sending the young and elderly to the front line against their will because they are not doing well", said Pablo Maristany de las Casas, an analyst for the Institute for Strategic Dialogue.

"There is always an event on which one can build false information," added Carole Grimaud, a researcher at France's Aix-Marseille University.

The videos "instrumentalise uncertainty to sow doubt in public opinion", she told AFP.

- Visual inconsistencies -

In one video, a Ukrainian soldier claiming to be "leaving Pokrovsk" walks without difficulty despite a cast on his leg. A stretcher appears to levitate, and disembodied legs fade in and out of the background.

These visual inconsistencies remain typical of content created by generative artificial intelligence, but they are becoming increasingly difficult to spot with the naked eye.

Other fake videos, some bearing the logo of OpenAI's Sora video creation tool, show soldiers in Ukrainian uniforms crying and begging not to be sent to the front.

Some of them appeared to use the faces of Russian online streamers.

Among those was exiled Russian YouTuber Alexei Gubanov, whose likeness appeared in a fake video of a Ukrainian soldier weeping.

"Obviously it's not me," he said in a YouTube video.

"Unfortunately, a lot of people believe this... and that plays into the hands of Russian propaganda."

- 'Chipping' at morale -

The European Digital Media Observatory, an EU-funded network of fact-checking organisations, says its community has published more than 2,000 articles related to the Ukraine war since Russia invaded in 2022, and AI has become an increasingly prevalent topic.

Ian Garner, a specialist in Russian propaganda at the Pilecki Institute, said disinformation is "an old tactic, but the technology is new".

The videos work by "chipping away at Ukrainian morale, saying: 'Look, this is somebody just like you, it could be your brother, your father'", he said.

Meanwhile, they boost Russian morale, he added.

TikTok told AFP that the accounts appearing to be behind these videos had been deleted, but not before one of them garnered more than 300,000 "likes" and several million views.

OpenAI told AFP it had conducted an investigation, without elaborating.

But this hasn't stopped the videos from circulating.

AFP found them, among other places, on Instagram, Telegram, Facebook and X in posts in Greek, Romanian, Bulgarian, Czech, Polish and French; on the website of a Russian weekly; and in a Serbian tabloid.

The impact of a fake video is difficult to measure, but "when it is repeated, it is possible that people's perceptions change", Grimaud said.

AI chatbots are also being used to promote pro-Kremlin talking points.

An Institute for Strategic Dialogue study published in October showed that among the chatbots tested, "almost one-fifth of responses cited Russian state-attributed sources".

While some companies have shown a willingness to combat the misuse of their tools, said Maristany de las Casas, "the scale and impact of information warfare outpace the companies' responses".

A.Slezak--TPP