According to domestic media reports,Short VideoA lot of video content of blonde and blue-eyed foreign beauties has emerged on the platform.
The contents of these videos are also varied.Some use the "beauty" persona to attract men to forward, like and comment on their posts to earn traffic revenue; others use the "beauty blogger" persona to promote products through window displays.
If users have never seen AI-generated videos, they may be easily attracted by their sweet looks and think that she is a real blogger.
In fact, these“Beauty" is made byAI face-changingGenerate, for example, a“Natasha is the blogger behind "Imported Food".
The character in the video is a Russian who settled in China. Through this identity, he publishes various short videos about life in Russia and China, and shares various Russian knowledge with everyone.
The number of fans on its platform exceeded 200,000 in just a few months.But the various video contents of this account are completely generated by AI, and even the real person in this portrait is a Ukrainian, her real name is Olga Loiek.
The tools for creating cloned short videos using real-life portraits are also quite mature. The operating team that cloned Olga used an AI portrait cloning software called HeyGen.
There are many HeyGen tutorials for beginners on the Internet.In terms of usage price, even the most expensive commercial version only costs $72 per month.
These accounts use the personas of "foreign beauty bloggers" to follow various hot topics online and earn a lot of traffic and sales revenue.
The monthly investment is only a few hundred yuan in software fees. Compared with other AI-generated video monetization methods, AI face-changing and cloning videos are more crude and efficient.