logo
Holocaust AI fakes spark alarm

Holocaust AI fakes spark alarm

Mint14-07-2025
The Facebook post shows a photo of a pretty curly-haired girl on a tricycle and says she is Hannelore Kaufmann, 13-year-old from Berlin who died in the Auschwitz concentration camp.
But there is no such Holocaust victim and the photo is not real, but generated by AI.
Content creators, often based in South Asia, are churning out such posts for money, targeting Westerners' emotional reactions to the Holocaust, in which six million Jewish people died, researchers told AFP.
Critics say that such AI-generated images, text and videos are offensive and contribute to Holocaust distortion by conjuring up a "fantasy-land Auschwitz".
The Auschwitz museum sounded the alarm over the trend.
"We're dealing with the creation of a false reality -- because it is falsifying images... falsifying history," museum spokesman Pawel Sawicki told AFP.
The museum at the site of Auschwitz-Birkenau Nazi concentration and extermination camp, where one million Jews were murdered in Nazi-occupied Poland, first noticed the posts in May, Sawicki said.
Some reproduced the museum's posts about victims but changed the images using AI, without flagging this.
"You can see the photo is based on the original but it's completely changed", Sawicki said.
A recent post about a Polish man was recreated with an "outrageous" AI image of an Asian man, he added.
In others, "both the photo and the story are fabricated"" Sawicki said, portraying "people who never existed".
A girl with a flower in her hair is named as Yvette Kahn who died in Auschwitz. No such victim appears in databases of the victims.
In other cases, details do not match.
A girl called Hanni Lore or Hannelore Kaufmann lived in western Germany -- not Berlin -- and died in Sobibor camp -- not Auschwitz, according to Israel's Yad Vashem remembrance centre.
Posts add emotive elements such as Kaufmann loving her tricycle.
But the Auschwitz museum spokesman stressed: "We generally don't have information about these people's lives."
Complaints to Facebook owner Meta have not resulted in action, Sawicki said.
"Unfortunately, it seems that from the perspective of the platform, this doesn't violate rules or regulations."
Facebook permits photo-realistic generative AI content but says it should be labelled, researchers said.
Meta did not respond to AFP's request for comment.
AFP currently works in 26 languages with Facebook's fact checking programme, in which Facebook pays to use fact checks from around 80 organisations globally on its platform, WhatsApp and Instagram.
The Holocaust trend was fuelled by Facebook's content-monetisation feature, researchers said.
"They create these images that trigger people to like or comment and they earn money from that," Martin Degeling, a researcher for AI Forensics non-profit, told AFP.
To elicit "emotional responses, you have to constantly switch topics" and the Holocaust seems to be the latest, Degeling said.
At least a dozen Facebook pages and groups post such content, many with administrators in developing economies such as India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka.
In Europe or the United States, monetisation from such posts "wouldn't be a sustainable income" but in poorer countries "you can live off that", Degeling said.
Holocaust posts often appear on pages previously run by US or British organisations.
"It's more lucrative to target high-income countries" via hacked or dormant accounts, Degeling said.
One page is still named after The Two Pennies pub in North Shields, northeastern England.
Clare Daley, who manages the pub's social media, told AFP its account was hacked but Meta took no action.
"It has been a huge shame, as we have years of posts and followers on there," she said.
Now managed in Sri Lanka, the page has 23,000 followers.
Fake portraits of Holocaust victims particularly upset victims' families.
"When I see that they post these images, it almost seems like it's mocking ... like we could just artificially recreate that loss," said Shaina Brander, a 31-year-old working in finance in New York.
Her 100-year-old grandmother, Chajka Brander, lost all her family in the Holocaust and camp guards took away her photographs.
Her father was shot in front of her and "she doesn't remember what he looks like", Brander said.
"You can't make an AI photo to bring that image back to her."
Holocaust educator Sofia Thornblad posts on TikTok about AI-generated videos simulating the Holocaust, which she calls "incredibly offensive".
The chief curator at Tulsa's Sherwin Miller Museum of Jewish Art cited one called: "Asked AI to show me what it was like as a prisoner of Auschwitz".
Liked over 74,000 times, it shows rosy-faced prisoners and quite comfy bunkbeds.
TikTok labels this "sensitive content" with an option to "learn the facts about the Holocaust".
"We have pictures of what liberation of concentration camps looks like and it's absolutely horrific," Thornblad, 31, told AFP.
The AI video looks "almost neutral", she said.
"It's like fantasy-land Auschwitz."
For Mykola Makhortykh, who researches the impact of AI on Holocaust memory, "we should be extremely concerned".
Chatbots are "particularly worrisome" for historical information, the University of Bern lecturer told AFP.
"Sometimes we even have them inventing, essentially, fake historical witnesses and fake historical evidence."
They can "hallucinate" non-existent events -- such as mass drowning of Jews, he said.
AI providers must use better information sources, he said but Holocaust museums also "need to adapt".
Some already use AI to preserve survivors' memories.
The UK's National Holocaust Centre and Museum interviewed 11 survivors for its "Forever Project".
Thanks to AI, visitors can "talk to" Steven Mendelsson, who came to Britain in the Kindertransport and died recently, museum director Marc Cave told AFP.
"It's a great use, a respectful use, of Steve," he said.
"Our ethical guideline is: treat the tech as if it were the real person."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Three held in ₹44 lakh cyber fraud case
Three held in ₹44 lakh cyber fraud case

The Hindu

time2 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Three held in ₹44 lakh cyber fraud case

Three persons were arrested by the cyber crime wing of the Hyderabad police for defrauding a city-based person of over ₹44 lakh by posing as trading advisors from a fictitious firm named 'Aveshta Study Group-W'. The accused were identified as Milind Manohar Narkar, 34, a private employee from Santacruz, Mumbai; Ranak Jagadish Patel, 31, a businessman from Bhiwandi, Thane; and Salik Imtiyaz Ahmed Siddiqui, 25, a private employee from Mumbra, Thane. All three were working in tandem with a cyber fraudster operating out of Dubai. According to investigators, the trio contacted the victim in June 2025 on phone, claiming to be professional trading advisors offering high return investment opportunities. Lured by the promise of substantial profits, the victim was persuaded to transfer funds into several bank accounts controlled by the accused. When the victim later attempted to withdraw the 'profits', he was asked to first pay a 20% 'service charge' on the returns. Believing the promise that both the profits and the original investment would be returned following this payment, the victim complied. In total, he was cheated of ₹44,04,753. During the investigation, it emerged that Milind Narkar was actively assisting the Dubai-based kingpin by converting fraudulently acquired funds into cryptocurrency. He also played a key role in sourcing and operating mule accounts, and was found to be accommodating account holders at various hotels in Mumbai. His network extended across seven other States in India where he allegedly facilitated the conversion of illicit gains into digital currency. The Hyderabad police seized three mobile phones from the accused. All three are believed to be working on commission for the overseas fraudster, by providing access to and managing local bank accounts used in the scam. Following the case, the Hyderabad police issued a public advisory warning citizens to be wary of suspicious investment schemes promising unusually high returns. Authorities have noted that scammers often pose as representatives of well-known firms and use forged documents, including fake SEBI certifications, to build credibility. Such fraudsters commonly advertise via platforms like Telegram, WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook, and often share fake profit screenshots to gain victims' trust. Citizens have been urged to verify investment schemes thoroughly before parting with their money and to avoid making hasty financial decisions based on promises of quick returns. Victims of cyber fraud are advised to immediately dial 1930 or visit: for assistance.

Meta launches anti-scam campaign with a twist to drive digital safety awareness
Meta launches anti-scam campaign with a twist to drive digital safety awareness

Hans India

time3 hours ago

  • Hans India

Meta launches anti-scam campaign with a twist to drive digital safety awareness

As part of Meta's commitment to user safety, we've launched the second edition of our anti-scams campaign, Scam se Bacho 2.0' that delivers digital safety tips with a twist. This year's campaign takes to the streets, literally, through a creative collaboration with digital creator Signboard_wala, known for using bold, witty placards to spark real-world conversations. Building on the success of last year's campaign, Scam se Bacho 2.0 brings scam awareness into public spaces across some of the most iconic streets in Mumbai, using culturally relevant and visually impactful storytelling to inform people about common online scams such as fake loan scams, impersonation and OTP fraud, among others. The campaign features Signboard_wala holding different signs such as 'Ex ho ya scammer, dono ko block & report karo' and 'Keep your friends close and your OTPs closer' – packaged as witty one-liners, the campaign delivers important digital safety lessons, spotlights Meta's safety features like two-factor authentication (2FA), Block and Report and encourages people to take an active role in their online safety. The clever, humorous messages designed to grab attention, definitely spark a smile but most importantly, make people pause and reconsider online scams. It's awareness with a twist - no preaching, no drama – just authentic, relatable moments that resonate. Last year Meta launched its safety campaign 'Scams se Bacho' by partnering with Bollywood star Ayushmann Khurrana to educate people on how to stay safe from online scams and promote safer digital practices. Launched in collaboration with the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), Indian Cybercrime Coordination Centre (I4C) and Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB), the campaign emphasised Meta's commitment to safeguard people online, supporting the Government's goal to combat the rising cases of scams and cyber frauds in the country.

Targeted attack on Jews? Blackstone executive Wesley LePatner's death in Midtown shooting raises questions
Targeted attack on Jews? Blackstone executive Wesley LePatner's death in Midtown shooting raises questions

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

Targeted attack on Jews? Blackstone executive Wesley LePatner's death in Midtown shooting raises questions

Wesley LePatner was the Blackstone executive killed in the Manhattan shooting. The Blackstone executive who was killed by 27-year-old crazed gunman Shane Tamura was a well-known Jewish figure in the community who even received an award in 2023 for her generosity to the community. The identification of the Wesley turned the random shooting into a targeted killing as many commentators said the earlier theories linking Tamura's manifesto, blaming the NFL, do not hold water after it's found that one of the victims was a Jew. Who was Wesley LePatner ? A senior managing director of financial giant Blackstone, Wesley LePatner joined Blackstone in 2014 and served as the global head of Core+ Real Estate and chief executive officer for Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust — a $53 billion property owner, according to Bloomberg. The Yale graduate previously worked at Goldman Sachs for more than a decade and serves on numerous Big Apple boards, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 'We are heartbroken to share that our colleague, Wesley LePartner, was among those who lost theor lives in the tragic incident at 345 Park Avenue,' Blackstone told The New York Post in a statement. 'Words cannot express the devastation we feel. Wesley was a beloved member of the Blackstone family and will be sorely missed. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like What Will Happen to Your Body If You Start Eating 3 Eggs Every Day? Undo 'She was brilliant, passionate, warm, generous, and deeply respected within our firm and beyond. 'She embodied the best of Blackstone. Our prayers are with her husband, children and family.' 'This has nothing to do with NFL' Right-wing commentator and President Donald Trump's aide Laura Loomer trained the gun at New York mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani and said that the group that was behind the shooting was the same group that Mamdani was photographed with. "The Blackstone building is one of the locations that was listed as a 'Globalize the Intifada Zone of Operation' by the Palestinian jihadi group 'Within Our Lifetime' @WOLPalestine. This is the same group that @ZohranKMamdani has been photographed protesting with. Witnesses said they heard the shooter yell free Palestine. Blackstone has a Jewish CEO and the shooter shot and killed a Jewish executive. This has nothing to do with the NFL. This shooting was another targeted attack on Jews by a pro-jihadi domestic terrorist who aligned with the Palestinian movement," Loomer posted. Midtown shooting: NFL connetion of shooter Shane Tamura Mayor Eric Adams said shooter Shane Tamura probably targeted the NFL office, as a strange manifesto was found on him in which he blamed football for his brain disease CTE -- chronic traumatic encephalopathy. CTE is caused by repeated head trauma possible from playing football for a long time but Tamura never played football professionally.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store