Trump posts image of fake Taylor Swift endorsement

U.S. ex-president posted several Swift-related images that appear to be AI-generated

Image | trump swift composite

Caption: Former U.S. president Donald Trump, left, has posted a fake social media image of pop superstar Taylor Swift asking people to vote for him in the November election. (Julia Nikhinson, Julio Cortez/The Associated Press)

Former U.S. president Donald Trump has posted a fake social media image of pop superstar Taylor Swift asking people to vote for him in the November election.
A Sunday entry(external link) by the Republican candidate on Truth Social showed Swift dressed in red, white and blue with a caption that said, "Taylor Swift Wants You To Vote For Donald Trump."
"I accept!" Trump wrote.
Swift has not publicly endorsed a candidate in the 2024 race but has supported Democrats in the past.
The singer backed President Joe Biden and running mate Kamala Harris in 2020. Harris is set to be formally nominated as the 2024 Democratic candidate at the party's national convention in Chicago this week. Swift also criticized Trump in a 2020 documentary.

Image | trump truth social taylor swift

Caption: Several Swift fans and watchdog groups said many of the images posted by Trump appeared to be deepfakes generated by artificial intelligence. (realDonaldTrump/Truth Social)

Spokespeople for Swift and Trump did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Trump also posted photos of young women wearing "Swifties for Trump" shirts, and a satirical article with the headline "Swifties Turning to Trump After ISIS Foiled Taylor Swift Concert." The article was marked "SATIRE" above the headline.
Swift cancelled three shows in Vienna this month after authorities said they had foiled a planned attack. Local officials arrested a 19-year-old man who they said was inspired by the militant Islamist group ISIS.
Several Swift fans and watchdog groups said many of the images posted by Trump appeared to be deepfakes generated by artificial intelligence.
Advocates in the music industry, Hollywood and Washington have been pushing for federal legislation and other measures to fight the explosion of fake AI images online.
Trump's post was "yet another example of AI's power to create misinformation," consumer group Public Citizen said.
"The potential harms to our society that could result from such misinformation, including abuses of our elections, are wide-reaching and immensely damaging."
At the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, Swift fan Rebecca Goff handed out friendship bracelets, a common practice among the singer's fans, at a Nevada Democratic Party breakfast.
Goff, 39, said she felt Trump was the antithesis of what she believes Swift stands for, including celebrating girlhood and womanhood. "That's like the antithesis of what Trump and the GOP are trying to do, especially to women. They're trying to make us smaller. They want us to go back to being just housewives, child bearers," she said.