Tag: Digital Ethics
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Wong Jing Weighs In: Boasting to Friends May Have Fueled Edison Chen Photo Leak in 2008
Background: A Scandal That Reverberated Across Hong Kong In 2008, Hong Kong star Edison Chen’s private photo scandal shattered the region’s entertainment industry and sparked a global conversation about celebrity privacy, media scrutiny, and personal boundaries. The revelations, which circulated online and dominated headlines for weeks, forced major recalibrations in film projects, endorsements, and public…
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Wong Jing Claims Boasting to Friends May Have Fueled Edison Chen Photo Leak in 2008
Revisiting a Defining Moment in Hong Kong Entertainment The 2008 Edison Chen photo leak remains a watershed moment in Hong Kong cinema and popular culture. As the world shifts through media narratives shaped by celebrity, privacy, and digital vulnerability, new commentary from industry veteran Wong Jing adds a provocative angle to the widely discussed incident.…
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Morgan Freeman’s Fight Against AI Voice Theft: What It Means for Actors and AI Ethics
Morgan Freeman Takes a Stand Against AI Voice Replication In a pointed conversation with The Guardian, Morgan Freeman expressed frustration over the rapid rise of AI technology that can imitate a celebrity’s voice without consent. The veteran actor said he is “PO’d” by the practice, signaling a broader concern in Hollywood: how to protect performers…
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AI Ethics Alert: Don’t Let Comet Complete Coursera Courses
What happened with Perplexity Comet and Coursera? A web developer shared a short video on X showing Perplexity AI’s Comet browser solving a Coursera assignment in seconds with the prompt, “Complete the assignment.” The clip appeared to demonstrate 12 questions completed automatically, suggesting the user could claim credit for a course they hadn’t personally worked…

