If you've been on cerita lucah tuaTikTok lately, you might have been served a video advertisement featuring Joe Rogan and one of his guests on his immensely popular podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience. In the clip, Rogan boasts about a "libido booster for men" supplement called Alpha Grind, going so far as to tell listeners exactly what to type in to find the product on Amazon.
Rogan is one of the most popular podcasters out there, with over ten million listeners per episode of his show. A brand endorsement like that would be a big get and likely a very expensive one for any product. Only Joe Rogan did not endorse Alpha Grind on his show. The clip featured in the TikTok video ad is a likely deepfake, an AI creation with the intent to make it appear as if Rogan endorsed the product in order to boost sales.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The video ad was posted and promoted on TikTok by a user going by the name @mikesmithtrainer. When Mashable first reviewed the TikTok account, the publicly posted videos consisted of testimonial clips of supposed everyday Alpha Grind consumers. As of publishing time, the @mikesmithtraineraccount is no longer accessible on TikTok.
A TikTok spokesperson confirmed to Mashable that the company "removed these videos under our harmful misinformation policy." TikTok also banned the account.
On Twitter, user @JimmyFarley00 repostedthe fake Joe Rogan clip and the tweet instantly went viral. The Twitter video has been viewed more than 5 million times and a number of users in the tweet's replies reportedly saw the ad on TikTok when it was still live. However, as of Feb. 15, the suspected Rogan deepfake has also been removed from Twitter. When trying to view the video, users are met with a prompt that claims the clip has been removed due to "a report from the copyright owner." Mashable has included an upload of the clip that is still live above.
When first confronted with the suspected deepfake Rogan video, some Twitter users didn't even realize what they were looking out for at first. Andrew D. Huberman, the guest on Rogan's podcast who is also featured in the video, enteredthe conversation to point out to those users that the conversation showcased in the video never actually happened.
"They created a false conversation," Huberman explained in the replies to the clip. "We were talking about something very different."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
In the clip, it's clear that some parts of the conversation are lifted from the podcast. The video is heavily edited and takes bits and pieces from the actual episode. The clip then also weaves what is likely completely fabricated AI deepfake audio and footage of Rogan endorsing the Alpha Grind product during their conversation, which — pending analysis from an expert — would mean the hoaxer used machine learning to replicate Rogan's voice and paired that with deceptive video editing or additional AI fakery to match-up his facial features to what he's saying.
Deepfakes aren't new and have been worryingethicists and disinformation experts for years now. However, there is a renewed interest in all things AI since OpenAI's impressive ChatGPTAI chatbot burst onto the scene showing just how much advancement has been made with machine learning technology.
TikTok actually banneddeepfake videos on the platform back in 2020, however, it's unclear how much the policy is enforced. When Mashable reached out, a TikTok spokesperson highlighted the platforms Community Guidelines which disallow "Digital Forgeries (Synthetic Media or Manipulated Media) that mislead users by distorting the truth of events and cause significant harm to the subject of the video, other persons, or society."
It should be noted that not all deepfakes are used for nefarious purposes, and that the technology can be used for creative videos meant to simply entertain viewers. However, deepfakes have been consistently thrust into the spotlight for their more negative use cases. Just last month, a popular Twitch streamer went viral after he mistakenly revealedin a livestream that he purchased non-consensual deepfake porn of other Twitch streamers.
Mashable has reached out to TikTok for more information on the Joe Rogan TikTok ad and the removal of the account that posted it. We will update this piece when we hear back.
Topics Artificial Intelligence TikTok X/Twitter Viral Videos ChatGPT
'Sho?gun' coLazio vs. Hellas Verona 2024 livestream: Watch live Serie A football for freeDC vs. MI 2024 livestream: Watch IPL for freeMotoGP livestream: Watch the 2024 Spanish Grand Prix for freeLazio vs. Hellas Verona 2024 livestream: Watch live Serie A football for freeSonos' new app has all your music on the Home screenAndroid might soon let you force dark mode onto all appsiPhone password reset attacks are real – how to protect yourselfApple confirms May 7 event: We're expecting iPads and 2 other new productsFurious Watcher fans are blasting it as 'greedy' over paid subscription service 'Where does this stop?' Obama blasts proposed Muslim ban following Orlando attack How Lonelygirl15 taught us to doubt everything on the internet Murdered British politician Jo Cox celebrated immigration and diversity in first speech Kim Kardashian holds onto things in sexy 'GQ' photoshoot Watermelon hair is here and it looks pretty darn tasty Sports reporter fired for anti Vladimir Putin is totally down with a Donald Trump presidency Justin Bieber calls on his Belieber army to silence the press Orlando attack is a 'wake This week on Instagram: 10 significant moments to remember
0.1382s , 9882.890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【cerita lucah tua】Enter to watch online.TikTok removes viral video ad of suspected Joe Rogan AI deepfake,Global Perspective Monitoring