Meta eliminated a misleading announcement With an image of Jamie Lee Curtis after the actress took on Instagram on this subject.
The franchise actress “Halloween” wrote an open letter to the meta-PDG Mark Zuckerberg, published more than six million followers on Instagram, imploring her business to delete an unauthorized message using her resemblance.
“It happened at this @zuck,” wrote Curtis in an Instagram post on Monday, marking Zuckerberg. “Hi. We never met. My name is Jamie Lee Curtis and I have traveled each chain appropriate to ask you, as well as your team, to remove this false advertisement completely AI for some bullshit – which I have not authorized, accepted or approved.”
Curtis added that she had tried to Dm Zuckerberg but that he was unable to do it because he had not followed it, so his last appeal had to “take the instatuated audience” to reach it.
His message also showed the ad in question. He presents a real photo of Curtis, taken from an interview that she made with the host of MSNBC Stephanie Ruhle in January, but superimposed on a false legend implying that Curtis said: “I would like everyone to suffer from …”
“If I have a brand, in addition to being an actor, an author and a defender, it is that I am known for having said the truth and saying like that and to have integrity,” continued Curtis in his Instagram message. “This (bad) use of my images (taken from an interview that I made with @stephruhle during fires) with new false words in my mouth, decreases my opportunities to really say my truth.”
A Meta spokesman told Bi that the announcements were in violation and had been deleted.
Curtis then added a comment on his message that said: “It worked! Yay Internet! Shame has its value!
Thank you to everyone who sounded and helped to rectify! “”
Meta announced last year that he had started testing the use of facial recognition technology to detect these so -called “celebrity bait” ads, which use images of public characters to attract people to defraud websites to share personal information or send money. It is not known what the advertising advertising announcement was promoting, or if it led users to scam sites.
Meta says that facial recognition technology compares the faces in the announcement to the profile photos of fame on Facebook and Instagram, and if it’s a match and the announcement is a scam, it will be blocked. The facial data generated for the comparison are immediately deleted, whether or not that has given correspondence, added the company.
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