📱 Deepfake concerns | Morning Newsletter

Parent Luciana Librandi walks back to her seat after speaking during a Radnor school board committee meeting last week.

Morning again, Philly.

High school students in Philadelphia’s suburbs used artificial intelligence to create deepfakes of classmates. Parents say schools aren’t doing enough to stop it.

And one of the nation’s oldest hospitals will soon become one of the city’s newest museums.

— Julie Zeglen (morningnewsletter@inquirer.com)

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AI-generated images and the law

So-called AI deepfakes — pictures of a real person manipulated with technology, sometimes with “nudify” features that can turn clothed images pornographic — are prompting concern among parents in the Philly region.

📱 Deepfake incidents have been reported in recent months in the Main Line’s Radnor Township School District and in Bucks County’s Council Rock School District. Both led to criminal charges against students who made sexually explicit videos of their classmates.

📱 Schools say they are limited in their ability to police students off campus, and that they have no role in criminal investigations. But parents want them to do more to protect students who are targeted.

📱 Notable quote: “They kept saying, ‘This is off campus,’” the parent of a deepfake victim told The Inquirer. But “my daughter could not walk around without crying and feeling ashamed.”

Education reporter Maddie Hanna has the story.

‘A very Philadelphia story’

At 275 years old, Pennsylvania Hospital’s Pine Building is the United States’ oldest chartered hospital — and older than the country itself.

The building at Eighth and Pine Streets is still in active use as a medical facility. Come this spring, its long history will be honored with a museum, too.

The Pennsylvania Hospital Museum will feature a restored medical library, surgical amphitheater, and apothecary, as well as archival objects describing the history of the hospital and the care it delivered.

Among the items on display: a “tonsil guillotine,” anatomical casts once used in place of cadavers, and a preserved tumor from 1805.

Kayla Yup and Bedatri D. Choudhury have more details.

In other cultural news: The Circle Theatre in Frankford, built in 1929 for what was once the largest movie theater chain in the country, is now officially recognized as historic.

What you should know today

🧠 Trivia time

Sixers forward Kelly Oubre Jr. on Monday released a new rap song, “Fast & Furious.” What is his stage name?

A) Jewels-40 Bars

B) The Philly Special

C) t$unami

D) Oubre

Think you know? Check your answer.

What we’re …

📺 Saving money on: YouTubeTV by way of this sports-specific plan.

🍸 Curious about: Why three Philly bars serve this rare Portuguese spirit.

🧁 Eager to try: Gluten-free bakery Flakely, now open in Bryn Mawr.

🍝 Visiting: The new Italian bar-restaurant at the Society Hill Hotel.

🎤 Considering: Bruce Springsteen’s long arc of protest.

🧩 Unscramble the anagram

Hint: North Philly singer

COLT JILTS

Email us if you know the answer. We’ll select a reader at random to shout out here.

Cheers to Christine Macdonald, who solved Monday’s anagram: Isabeau Levito. The 18-year-old South Jersey figure skater makes her Olympic debut today. Catch up on her homegrown lore and find out when to watch her skate.

Photo of the day

Enjoy it while you can, little guys: Squirrels in the snow in Independence National Historical Park.

Thanks for starting your day with The Inquirer. See you back here tomorrow, bright and early.

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