
TikTok's AI Alive lets users bring photos to life with text prompts: All you need to know
TikTok has unveiled a new artificial intelligence feature that allows users to convert still images into animated videos. The feature, calledAI Alive, is the platform's latest step into generative AI, and marks the first time a major video-centric social media app has introduced image-to-video creation using artificial intelligence.
Currently available exclusively for TikTok Stories, the AI-powered tool enables users to animate photographs by selecting an image from their Story Album and entering a short text prompt. The feature can be accessed by tapping the blue plus (+) icon at the top of either the Inbox or Profile pages, followed by selecting an image. Once on the editing screen, users will find the AI Alive button positioned second from the top in the toolbar on the right.
After tapping the icon, a new window opens where users can input their own animation prompt or select from a range of suggested ideas. Once the prompt is submitted, the tool generates a brief video that can be posted directly to the user's Story. These AI-created stories are viewable through theFor You andFollowing feeds, as well as on individual profiles.
TikTok has emphasised safety and responsibility in the rollout of AI Alive. To mitigate misuse, the platform has integrated several layers of moderation. Every image, prompt, and resulting video is reviewed by moderation technology before the video becomes visible to its creator. A final check is performed prior to public posting. In addition, users are encouraged to report any content that they believe violates community guidelines.
To ensure transparency, all videos created with AI Alive will carry a visible 'AI-generated' label, said the company. The platform is also embedding C2PA (Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity) metadata into these videos — a standard that helps verify the authenticity and origin of AI-generated content.
While TikTok takes the lead in this space, rival platforms such as Instagram, Snapchat, and X currently lack similar AI video creation tools. YouTube Shorts has begun experimenting with a text-to-video generator, but it remains in limited testing.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Hindu
2 days ago
- The Hindu
Iran-Israel fighting distorted by tech-fuelled misinformation
AI deepfakes, video game footage passed off as real combat, and chatbot-generated falsehoods; such tech-enabled misinformation is distorting the Israel-Iran conflict, fuelling a war of narratives across social media. The information warfare unfolding alongside ground combat, sparked by Israel's strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities and military leadership, underscores a digital crisis in the age of rapidly advancing AI tools that have blurred the lines between truth and fabrication. The surge in wartime misinformation has exposed an urgent need for stronger detection tools, experts say, as major tech platforms have largely weakened safeguards by scaling back content moderation and reducing reliance on human fact-checkers. After Iran struck Israel with barrages of missiles last week, AI-generated videos falsely claimed to show damage inflicted on Tel Aviv and Ben Gurion Airport. The videos were widely shared across Facebook, Instagram and X. Using a reverse image search, AFP's fact-checkers found that the clips were originally posted by a TikTok account that produces AI-generated content. There has been a "surge in generative AI misinformation, specifically related to the Iran-Israel conflict," Ken Jon Miyachi, founder of the Austin-based firm BitMindAI, told AFP. "These tools are being leveraged to manipulate public perception, often amplifying divisive or misleading narratives with unprecedented scale and sophistication." GetReal Security, a U.S. company focused on detecting manipulated media including AI deepfakes, also identified a wave of fabricated videos related to the Israel-Iran conflict. The company linked the visually compelling videos, depicting apocalyptic scenes of war-damaged Israeli aircraft and buildings as well as Iranian missiles mounted on a trailer, to Google's Veo 3 AI generator, known for hyper-realistic visuals. The Veo watermark is visible at the bottom of an online video posted by the news outlet Tehran Times, which claims to show "the moment an Iranian missile" struck Tel Aviv. "It is no surprise that as generative-AI tools continue to improve in photo-realism, they are being misused to spread misinformation and sow confusion," said Hany Farid, the co-founder of GetReal Security and a professor at the University of California, Berkeley. Farid offered one tip to spot such deepfakes: the Veo 3 videos were normally eight seconds in length or a combination of clips of a similar duration. "This eight-second limit obviously doesn't prove a video is fake, but should be a good reason to give you pause and fact-check before you re-share," he said. The falsehoods are not confined to social media. Disinformation watchdog NewsGuard has identified 51 websites that have advanced more than a dozen false claims ranging from AI-generated photos purporting to show mass destruction in Tel Aviv to fabricated reports of Iran capturing Israeli pilots. Sources spreading these false narratives include Iranian military-linked Telegram channels and state media sources affiliated with the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB), sanctioned by the US Treasury Department, NewsGuard said. "We're seeing a flood of false claims and ordinary Iranians appear to be the core targeted audience," McKenzie Sadeghi, a researcher with NewsGuard, told AFP. Sadeghi described Iranian citizens as "trapped in a sealed information environment," where state media outlets dominate in a chaotic attempt to "control the narrative." Iran itself claimed to be a victim of tech manipulation, with local media reporting that Israel briefly hacked a state television broadcast, airing footage of women's protests and urging people to take to the streets. Adding to the information chaos were online clips lifted from war-themed video games. AFP's fact-checkers identified one such clip posted on X, which falsely claimed to show an Israeli jet being shot down by Iran. The footage bore striking similarities to the military simulation game Arma 3. Israel's military has rejected Iranian media reports claiming its fighter jets were downed over Iran as "fake news." Chatbots such as xAI's Grok, which online users are increasingly turning to for instant fact-checking, falsely identified some of the manipulated visuals as real, researchers said. "This highlights a broader crisis in today's online information landscape: the erosion of trust in digital content," BitMindAI's Miyachi said. "There is an urgent need for better detection tools, media literacy, and platform accountability to safeguard the integrity of public discourse."


Hindustan Times
3 days ago
- Hindustan Times
What is AI-generated ASMR content on TikTok? All you need to know about viral trend
Over the past few years, AI-generated video content has gained significant popularity on social media, with users creating different types of clips, including both bizarre and creative, to earn more followers by getting viral. If you are an avid TikTok user, chances are high that you have already come across the latest viral trend on the social media platform, AI-generated ASMR videos, as per a report by the Tribune. AI-generated ASMR content goes viral on TikTok. Here's all you need to know Now, people have been sharing videos of AI-generated glass fruits getting sliced with crystal-clear ASMR sounds on TikTok. The AI ASMR trend simply combines soothing sounds with several surreal and impossible scenarios. Searching 'AI ASMR' on TikTok leads users to hundreds of such visuals that feature a knife slicing through several crystal-like objects shaped like fruits such as grapes, watermelons, apples and more. On X, investor Olivia Moore highlighted that an account, started three days ago on TikTok, managed to get 82,000 followers by sharing just 11 such videos. The viral TikTok trend is not just limited to slicing objects. In a viral video, an AI-generated woman can be seen performing a mukbang, or a live streaming event where a host eats a lot of food. Interestingly, her video did not feature any food. She can be seen using chopsticks to have a glowing bowl of molten lava. Such clips, which are clearly made up with the help of artificial intelligence tools, have fascinated millions of viewers on social media platforms, especially TikTok. Another one shows an alien character wishing Happy Father's Day, while holding a plate in hand that appears to be filled with sizzling lava shaped like a steak. Also read: Who is Amouranth? Viral streamer returns to Twitch after profiting $38 million off Kick How to create ASMR videos using AI? There are several AI video generating tools available online that can be used to create these AI glass effects. Some of these include Veo 3 (by Google) and Deevid AI. FAQs 1. What's the AI ASMR trend on TikTok? It shows AI-generated glass fruits being sliced with crystal-clear ASMR sounds. 2. Are advanced video editing skills required to create these glass ASMR videos? No. People can take the help of beginner-friendly AI tools to generate the clips. 3. What's the ideal length for AI ASMR videos to get best results? The average duration of these videos is 10 to 15 seconds.


New Indian Express
3 days ago
- New Indian Express
Pope warns of AI risks to young brains
Vatican City: Pope Leo XIV warned on Friday of the potential consequences of artificial intelligence (AI) on the intellectual development of young people, saying it could damage their grip on reality. Since his election as head of the Catholic Church on May 8, the pope -- a mathematics graduate -- has repeatedly warned of the risks associated with AI but this is the first time he has spoken out exclusively on the subject. "All of us... are concerned for children and young people, and the possible consequences of the use of AI on their intellectual and neurological development," the American pope warned in a written message to participants at the second Rome Conference on AI. "No generation has ever had such quick access to the amount of information now available through AI. "But again, access to data -- however extensive -- must not be confused with intelligence," Leo told business leaders, policymakers and researchers attending the annual conference. While welcoming the use of AI in "enhancing research in healthcare and scientific discovery", the pope said it "raises troubling questions on its possible repercussions" on humanity's "distinctive ability to grasp and process reality". Pope Leo himself has been the target of deep fake videos and audio messages published on social media in recent weeks. An AFP investigation earlier this month identified dozens of YouTube and TikTok pages broadcasting AI-generated messages masquerading as genuine comments from the pope in English or Spanish. A survey from the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism this week found significant numbers of young people in particular were using chatbots to get headlines and updates. The Catholic Church has attempted to influence ethical thinking surrounding the use of new technologies in recent years under Leo's predecessor Francis. In 2020, the Vatican initiated the Rome Call for AI Ethics -- signed by Microsoft, IBM, the United Nations, Italy and a host of universities -- urging transparency and respect for privacy.