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Ever heard the phrase "The camera don't lie" or "Seeing is Believing"? Chances are you have.These saying have come about over the past decades as a way to imply that something your eyes see, can usually be trusted.
Unfortunately, not anymore.
Most people are trusting by nature, they figure if something is placed before them, and they are told something, it can usually be trusted.While this mentality can be good in some cases, it can be mighty dangerous in others, and it's just going to get worse.
Over the last 5 years, we have watched as Ai has taken over the world, it feels like everyday there's something new, and it's hard to keep track of if you aren't actively monitoring it, but it's real.
In 2019, OpenAi launched Dall-E the first mainstream AI image generater, it took that world by shock, many thoughts emerged on the subject, some said it was a miracle, Impressive, The Future, others were skeptical, and saw the immense danger and harm it could cause.Then Sora came out a few years later, all of a sudden people are making videos with audio using AI, although many criticized it for not looking real enough.
And now in 2025, Google and OpenAi made headlines with Veo 3 and Sora 2, models that changed the industry and the world forever. Now AI videos and works are all over with the internet, and AI generated text works surpassed the number of human works on the internet this year.
And it doesn't stop there, there's now AI music as well, with AI songs going undetected by millions, people even enjoying these works.But with the obvious criticism remains, is it ethical to create content like music with tools that are trained off the blood sweat and tears of real artists who pour their souls into making it?
What will the internet look like in 10 years? Will AI content surpass that of people? Will people know? How do we prevent those who don't understand like the elderly from falling victim to scams?What does the future look like?Is seeing still believing?.