The search phrase highlights a growing, highly concerning trend in the digital era: the weaponization of artificial intelligence against prominent public figures. Marlene Lufen, a celebrated German television journalist and host of Sat.1-Frühstücksfernsehen , is among many prominent women targeted by malicious actors using generative AI to create non-consensual altered images (deepfakes).
Im Jahr 2026 sind die Tools so fortgeschritten, dass die Unterscheidung zwischen echten Fotos und Deepfakes ohne technisches Hilfsmittel kaum noch möglich ist.
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Then Marlene spoke: “What you have seen is not a lie, but a possibility. History is a tapestry woven from what we choose to remember and what we choose to forget. My images are invitations—to question, to imagine, to fill the gaps left by silence.”
Before you click on the latest gallery promising consider the ethics. The search phrase highlights a growing, highly concerning
This guide explains how to identify these "fakes" and why they are dangerous. 1. Identifying Common Scams
The modifier is crucial. It suggests that previous debunkings are obsolete and that new, more convincing fakes have emerged. This is a common SEO tactic among clickbait farms: This public link is valid for 7 days
If you see manipulated content on social media platforms like Instagram or X (Twitter), use the reporting tools to flag it as "Non-consensual sexual content" or "Harassment." The Bottom Line
In a rare public statement (February 2025), Lufen addressed the issue without giving the fakes more attention: