Zao’s original privacy policy stated the app’s owners would have “free, irrevocable, permanent, transferable, and relicense-able” rights to all the images users upload and the content made with them. It has since been updated to say it will not use any of the content for anything but improving the app.
Bloomberg also said that if users delete content from the app, it’s now removed from Zao’s servers. The issues came to light after a claim Monday from the China E-Commerce Research Center that suggested the app “violates certain laws and standards set by the nation and the industry”.
Deepfake is the term for video manipulation using artificial intelligence that is so convincing that many who view it out of context will believe it to be true. It is becoming an issue in politics where audiences can be tricked into thinking leaders have said things that they simply never did. Politicians are braced in the US for the dissemination of deepfakes during the 2020 Presidential election after the swift maturing of the technology.
The issue has evolved somewhat from its original beginnings in the porn industry to port celebrities faces onto adult actors.
It’s positive that the changes were made to the privacy agreement on Zao following negative app store reviews, but it’s too late for those who signed up under the original terms. It again raises the huge problem with data privacy in a world where free apps can be downloaded hundreds of thousands of times in mere hours.
Henry is Tech Advisor’s Phones Editor, ensuring he and the team covers and reviews every smartphone worth knowing about for readers and viewers all over the world. He spends a lot of time moving between different handsets and shouting at WhatsApp to support multiple devices at once.