Risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes: Systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven European Countries

This study provides an evidence-based integrated appraisal of artificial intelligence (AI)-generated deepfakes by integrating a cross-disciplinary literature synthesis with original opinion-poll evidence from seven European countries. A SWOT matrix distils convergent concerns—weaponised disinformati...

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Main Authors: Nik Hynek, Beata Gavurova, Matus Kubak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-09-01
Series:Journal of Innovation & Knowledge
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2444569X25001271
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author Nik Hynek
Beata Gavurova
Matus Kubak
author_facet Nik Hynek
Beata Gavurova
Matus Kubak
author_sort Nik Hynek
collection DOAJ
description This study provides an evidence-based integrated appraisal of artificial intelligence (AI)-generated deepfakes by integrating a cross-disciplinary literature synthesis with original opinion-poll evidence from seven European countries. A SWOT matrix distils convergent concerns—weaponised disinformation, privacy erosion, and the detection arms race—alongside under-explored opportunities in education, therapy, and creative industries. To test whether these scholarly themes resonate with citizens, a computer-assisted web survey (N = 7,083) measured perceived risks and benefits across 10 specific scenarios for each theme. Correspondence analysis and Bonferroni-adjusted means reveal a pronounced age gradient for benefits, whereas risk perceptions vary by country—younger cohorts are noticeably less alarmed only in Sweden, France, and Czechia. Geographically, Dutch, German, British, and Italian publics prove the most enthusiastic: the United Kingdom (UK) couples similar enthusiasm with markedly higher risk vigilance, whereas Czech and Swedish respondents remain consistently sceptical, underscoring a broad, though imperfect, west/south versus central/north divide. The Netherlands, Germany, the UK, and Italy value pro-social applications (i.e., realistic crisis drills, public-interest campaigns, and therapeutic ‘mental-health’ avatars), with the Netherlands topping four benefit items and Italy favouring commercial/entertainment uses such as virtual brand ambassadors. By contrast, Czech and Swedish respondents assign uniformly low benefit scores. Juxtaposed with risk perceptions, the UK and Czechia register the greatest vigilance, Sweden the most relaxed, and others intermediate. Divergence seems associated with digital literacy levels and regulatory maturity. The survey reveals a statistically and practically significant gap between perceived risks and benefits: across all seven countries, respondents, on average, rate risks higher than advantages. Regression estimates indicate that advancing age, lower household income, and gender (woman) enlarge this gap—primarily by undermining perceived benefits—whereas tertiary education and residence in certain western or southern European countries—notably, Germany and Italy—are associated with more balanced appraisals. This study concludes that layered governance, interoperable detection standards, and targeted literacy programmes are urgently required.
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spelling doaj-art-bcf91cc32c4244d7b9de137933ee68c32025-08-25T04:14:37ZengElsevierJournal of Innovation & Knowledge2444-569X2025-09-0110510078210.1016/j.jik.2025.100782Risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes: Systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven European CountriesNik Hynek0Beata Gavurova1Matus Kubak2Department of Security Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University in Prague, Prague, CzechiaTechnical University of Košice, Faculty of Mining, Ecology, Process Control and Geotechnologies, Košice, Slovakia; Corresponding author.Technical University of Košice, Faculty of Economics, Košice, SlovakiaThis study provides an evidence-based integrated appraisal of artificial intelligence (AI)-generated deepfakes by integrating a cross-disciplinary literature synthesis with original opinion-poll evidence from seven European countries. A SWOT matrix distils convergent concerns—weaponised disinformation, privacy erosion, and the detection arms race—alongside under-explored opportunities in education, therapy, and creative industries. To test whether these scholarly themes resonate with citizens, a computer-assisted web survey (N = 7,083) measured perceived risks and benefits across 10 specific scenarios for each theme. Correspondence analysis and Bonferroni-adjusted means reveal a pronounced age gradient for benefits, whereas risk perceptions vary by country—younger cohorts are noticeably less alarmed only in Sweden, France, and Czechia. Geographically, Dutch, German, British, and Italian publics prove the most enthusiastic: the United Kingdom (UK) couples similar enthusiasm with markedly higher risk vigilance, whereas Czech and Swedish respondents remain consistently sceptical, underscoring a broad, though imperfect, west/south versus central/north divide. The Netherlands, Germany, the UK, and Italy value pro-social applications (i.e., realistic crisis drills, public-interest campaigns, and therapeutic ‘mental-health’ avatars), with the Netherlands topping four benefit items and Italy favouring commercial/entertainment uses such as virtual brand ambassadors. By contrast, Czech and Swedish respondents assign uniformly low benefit scores. Juxtaposed with risk perceptions, the UK and Czechia register the greatest vigilance, Sweden the most relaxed, and others intermediate. Divergence seems associated with digital literacy levels and regulatory maturity. The survey reveals a statistically and practically significant gap between perceived risks and benefits: across all seven countries, respondents, on average, rate risks higher than advantages. Regression estimates indicate that advancing age, lower household income, and gender (woman) enlarge this gap—primarily by undermining perceived benefits—whereas tertiary education and residence in certain western or southern European countries—notably, Germany and Italy—are associated with more balanced appraisals. This study concludes that layered governance, interoperable detection standards, and targeted literacy programmes are urgently required.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2444569X25001271O32O33O35O38
spellingShingle Nik Hynek
Beata Gavurova
Matus Kubak
Risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes: Systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven European Countries
Journal of Innovation & Knowledge
O32
O33
O35
O38
title Risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes: Systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven European Countries
title_full Risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes: Systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven European Countries
title_fullStr Risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes: Systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven European Countries
title_full_unstemmed Risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes: Systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven European Countries
title_short Risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes: Systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven European Countries
title_sort risks and benefits of artificial intelligence deepfakes systematic review and comparison of public attitudes in seven european countries
topic O32
O33
O35
O38
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2444569X25001271
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