Thursday, April 18, 2024 | Shawwal 8, 1445 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
25°C / 25°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

‘Deepfake’ videos the new hi-tech threat

minus
plus


Rob Lever -
If you see a video of a politician speaking words he never would utter, or a Hollywood star improbably appearing in a cheap adult movie, don’t adjust your television set — you may just be witnessing the future of “fake news”.
“Deepfake” videos that manipulate reality are becoming more sophisticated due to advances in artificial intelligence, creating the potential for new kinds of misinformation with devastating consequences.
Worries are growing over how deepfakes can be used for nefarious purposes by hackers or state actors.
“We’re not quite to the stage where we are seeing deepfakes weaponised, but that moment is coming,” Robert Chesney, a University of Texas law professor who has researched the topic, said.
Chesney argues that deepfakes could add to the current turmoil over disinformation and influence operations.
“A well-timed and thoughtfully scripted deepfake or series of deepfakes could tip an election, spark violence in a city primed for civil unrest, bolster insurgent narratives about an enemy’s supposed atrocities, or exacerbate political divisions in a society,” Chesney and University of Maryland professor Danielle Citron said in a blog post for the Council on Foreign Relations.
Paul Scharre, a senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security, a think-tank specialising in AI and security issues, said it was almost inevitable that deepfakes would be used in upcoming elections.
A fake video could be deployed to smear a candidate, Scharre said, or enable people to deny actual events captured on authentic video.
With believable fake videos in circulation, he added, “people can choose to believe whatever version or narrative that they want, and that’s a real concern.”
Video manipulation has been around for decades and can be innocuous or even entertaining — as in the digitally-aided appearance of Peter Cushing in 2016’s “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story,” 22 years after his death.
Carnegie Mellon University researchers last year revealed techniques that make it easier to produce deepfakes via machine learning to infer missing data.
In the movie industry, “the hope is we can have old movie stars like Charlie Chaplin come back,” said Aayush Bansal.
The popularisation of apps which make realistic fake videos threatens to undermine the notion of truth in news media, criminal trials and many other areas, researchers say.
“If we can put any words in anyone’s mouth, that is quite scary,” says Siwei Lyu, a professor of computer science at the State University of New York at Albany, who is researching deepfake detection.
“It blurs the line between what is true and what is false. If we cannot really trust information to be authentic it’s no better than to have no information at all.”
Representative Adam Schiff and two other lawmakers recently sent a letter to National Intelligence Director Dan Coats asking for information about what the government is doing to combat deepfakes.
“Forged videos, images or audio could be used to target individuals for blackmail or for other nefarious purposes,” the lawmakers wrote.
“Of greater concern for national security, they could also be used by foreign or domestic actors to spread misinformation.”
Researchers have been working on better detection methods for some time, with support from private firms such as Google and government entities like the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research projects Agency (DARPA), which began a media forensics initiative in 2015.
Lyu’s research has focused on detecting fakes, in part by analysing the rate of blinking of an individual’s eyes.
But he acknowledges that even detecting fakes may not be enough, if a video goes viral and leads to chaos.
While deepfakes have been evolving for several years, the topic came into focus with the creation last April of video appearing to show former president Barack Obama using a curse word to describe his successor Donald Trump — a coordinated stunt from film-maker Jordan Peele and BuzzFeed. — afp



SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon