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France 24
France 24
World

AI-generated images add to the confusion in the war between Israel and Hamas

These two images generated by artificial intelligence were shared online by pro-Palestinian accounts. © Observers

Since the attack carried out on Israel by Hamas on October 7, the internet has been flooded with thousands of images of the conflict and even more rumours. However, many of the videos and photos circulating are actually false. Two of these images recently went viral. The first image supposedly shows a camp for Israeli refugees illegally constructed in Palestinian territory. The second is said to show a Palestinian flag being held aloft by football fans. In reality, both of the images were generated by AI.

If you only have a minute

  • The first image shows what looks like a displaced persons camp for Israelis with tents in the colours of the Israeli flag. According to the social media accounts that circulated the image, it shows a camp for Israeli refugees illegally constructed in the Palestinian Territories. 
  • A second image seems to show fans of the Spanish football club Atletico Madrid carrying a giant Palestinian flag during a football match.  
  • However, our team contacted two experts in image analysis, who confirmed that these two pictures were actually generated by artificial intelligence. 

The fact check, in detail

The image shows dozens of blue and white tents, the colour of the Israeli flag, set up on a beach. The people who shared this image claimed that it was the first camp for displaced Israelis. They also claimed that the camp was illegally built in the Palestinian territories.  

The image was shared on X (formerly Twitter) with a caption in Arabic on October 22. 

This post on X from October 22 supposedly shows a displaced persons camp for Israelis illegally built within the Palestinian Territories. The caption reads, “The occupation built its first camp for displaced Zionists in our occupied territories.” © Observers

No Israeli refugee camp has been built in the Palestinian Territories 

Our team spoke to Hany Farid, a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who is a specialist in digital images and the detection of doctored images, about the image of the Israeli refugee camp. 

“Our models – trained to distinguish real from AI-generated images – reveal these images to be, with a high-degree of certainty, AI generated,” he said. 

Denis Teyssou, the head of French news agency Agence France Presse’s Medialab, agreed. Teyssou also serves as the head of innovation at vera.ai, a project dedicated to detecting AI-generated images. 

When the photo of the alleged refugee camp was uploaded to vera.ai, it concluded that this image was generated by artificial intelligence – more specifically that it was created using a “diffusion model” algorithm. This is the algorithm used by software like Midjourney to generate images through artificial intelligence.

This is the result when we put the image of the Israeli refugee camp through the artificial intelligence detector vera.ai. © vera.ai

Vera.ai is able to detect images generated by artificial intelligence with about 77% accuracy. 

“This rate can be attributed to modifications [of the original image] like resampling, which is changing the amount of pixels in an image, cropping an image. These are both factors that reduce the reliability of the detector,” Teyssou said. 

There have been no reports about the existence of a camp for displaced Israelis or even a mass movement of displaced persons in Israel since the attacks on October 7. A number of American citizens were able to evacuate to Cyprus.

No, Atletico Madrid fans didn’t brandish a giant Palestinian flag

The second image seems to show fans of the Spanish football team Atletico Madrid carrying a giant Palestinian flag, which covers one part of a stadium where a football game seems to be going on. 

“Supporters of Atletico Madrid support Palestine,” reads this caption posted on October 19 and viewed 1.8 million times on X.

This post on X from October 19 seems to show supporters of Atletico Madrid carrying a giant Palestinian flag. © Observers

The first clue about the image comes from the dates. Atletico only played one game between October 7 – the day that Hamas carried out a bloody attack on Israel – and the day that the image was posted. That one game was played during the day on October 8. However, the image shows a stadium at night, lit up by artificial lighting.

Moreover, if you look at the image, you’ll see that the arms of a number of the supporters appear deformed – which is a typical issue with AI-generated images.

If you zoom in, then you’ll see that the arms of some supporters were deformed – a clue that that image was generated by artificial intelligence. Observers

UC Berkeley Professor Farid also analysed this image and determined that it was also generated by artificial intelligence.

When we ran the image through vera.ai, it concluded that the image was generated by artificial intelligence, with 99% certainty.

So far, the tool hasn’t produced any false positives, said Teyssou, which indicates a high degree of reliability. 

AI-detector vera.ai concluded that the image of football supporters with a Palestinian flag was generated by AI. © vera.ai

Finally, Juan Jose Anaut, Atletico Madrid’s deputy director for communications and marketing, told news agency Reuters that the image of the flag wasn’t authentic. 

An information war over images generated by AI 

These two photos, shared by pro-Palestinian accounts, were generated by artificial intelligence in order to raise support for the Palestinian cause and discredit Israeli authorities. 

The information war is raging alongside the war between Israel and Hamas. Recently, pro-Palestinian accounts claimed that the Israeli government had shared AI-generated images of burned children. It turned out, however, that these images were real. 

Read moreWas this photo of a dead Israeli baby AI-generated? When AI-detection errors muddle public debate

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