A New Obsession Begins
Across India, a silent yet powerful wave is sweeping through the young generation. From college classrooms to late–night hostel rooms, from cyber cafés to the smartphones hidden under blankets—there is one common addiction.
Artificial Intelligence.
ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Grok—and dozens of other AI tools—have become the new companions of today’s youth. To them, it feels as if technology has placed a magic wand in their hands. With a simple sentence, they can create poems, fix assignments, generate photos, or imagine themselves as superheroes.
But beneath this glittering magic lies an unsettling darkness—one that grows quietly, unnoticed, until it suddenly shakes lives.
The Dark World of Deepfakes
The fun turns frightening when harmless creativity becomes dangerous misuse.
Youngsters have started experimenting with deepfakes—fake videos and edited photos—thinking it’s just a joke.
But this joke has ruined real lives.
Girls have found themselves trapped in the nightmare of AI-created obscene videos—videos they never shot, faces morphed into situations they never imagined. Some cry silently, some hide in shame, and some fear stepping outside their homes again.
A technology meant for progress has turned into a weapon in the wrong hands.
Beauty Filters and Broken Minds
AI doesn’t stop at faking videos. It paints perfect bodies, perfect faces, perfect lives—so perfect that real life begins to feel imperfect.
On social media, flawless faces and dreamy AI photos flood timelines.
Behind the screen, however, thousands of young people compare themselves to these impossible images and begin to break from within.
Body shaming rises.
Depression grows.
Anxiety grips silently.
Some lose confidence, and some lose hope.
AI creates beauty, but it also creates pain.
Viral Trends and Invisible Risks
A few days ago, the internet danced to the “Nano Banana” trend.
People—teenagers, film stars, even politicians—rushed to upload their photos into AI systems to see themselves transformed into fantasy characters.
Before the craze ended, the Ghibli trend arrived, painting everyone in dreamlike pastel colors.
The world laughed, shared, and admired.
But underneath the excitement, experts whispered warnings—warnings that were drowned by the noise of viral popularity.
Is AI Stealing Our Faces?
Cyber specialists reveal a worrying truth:
Every time we upload a photo to these tools, we may be handing over more than just an image—we may be giving away our face identity.
This is the same identity used for:
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Bank KYC
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Face recognition in apps
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Personal authentication
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Government documentation
If these images fall into the wrong hands, fake IDs can be created, accounts can be opened, crimes can be committed—all with a face that looks exactly like you.
A frightening possibility.
Google’s Invisible Watermark: A Thin Shield
Google insists that every AI-generated image carries an invisible sign—SynthID, a hidden watermark that identifies it as AI-made.
But experts remain unconvinced.
“It can be removed easily.”
“It can be tampered.”
“It’s not enough to protect anything.”
The digital signature seems too fragile for a world full of smart criminals and clever hackers.
Are We Really Safe Online?
Some specialists argue that Google already stores millions of our pictures—Google Photos, Drive, Gmail—so privacy is already a fading concept.
Others believe this is different.
This time, AI tools are not just storing selfies—they are studying our faces, analyzing every angle, every feature, every detail. And once that information is out, it may never come back.
A Call for Protection
Seeing the rising chaos, responsible citizens request the government to bring strict guidelines for AI tools—rules that ensure safety, ethics, and privacy.
Because without rules, this powerful technology might do more harm than good.
So, Is AI a Gift or a Threat?
AI is a mirror—reflecting both our brilliance and our flaws.
It can help us learn, create, imagine, and grow.
But it can also deceive, manipulate, and destroy.
Whether AI becomes a blessing or a danger depends not just on the technology—but on how wisely we use it.
In the end, the real question is not whether AI is safe.
The real question is:
“Are we prepared to use it responsibly?”