In this article, we offer three ear-worthy podcasts that cover deepfakes causing human damage, survivors of a devastating fire, and crime solvers who use TikTok as their forensics tool.
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Levittown is
A real-life horror story for the AI generation, this six-part series
from Bloomberg, Kaleidoscope and iHeart Podcasts sees reporters Olivia
Carville and
Margi Murphy take listeners from quiet suburbs of New York to as far as
New Zealand and into the darkest corners of the Internet -- where tech
moves faster than the law, and it’s up to everyday people to hold back a
rising tide of explicit deepfakes.
Dozens of recent high-school graduates are finding out that their photos have been scraped from their social media accounts, manipulated and posted to a porn website.
Who would have done this? And can the women get the images taken down? Told there isn’t much the police or anyone else can do, they set out to catch whoever did this.
Along the way, they get some help from a global band of investigators and hackers who could take risks that police and prosecutors sometimes couldn't.
Check out Levittown. There's no telling which town they could come to next. This podcast has to be good. It took three large companies to develop and produce it.
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To Altadena, With Love is a five-part series on resilience and rebuilding blends history,
education and personal stories to highlight Altadena’s legacy
and the devastating impact of the Eaton Fire in January.
This is just another in a long, long line of true-crime podcasts. After
19-year-old Daisy De La O was murdered outside her Compton apartment,
her friends and family looked to authorities to make an arrest.
In My Friend Daisy, when
that didn’t happen, they took matters into their own hands -- with
TikTok as their secret weapon. From London Audio, iHeartRadio and
executive producer Paris Hilton, My Friend Daisy is a ten-part
investigative series diving deep into the murder investigation
and its fallout, exposing what went wrong, how it went viral and why
American communities are turning to social media to find justice.
Hosted and written by journalist Jenn Swann, My Friend Daisy launched on March 26. Tune
in Wednesdays.
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