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  • Deepfake Screencap

    Why manipulated ‘deepfake’ videos are so difficult to spot

    Jun 13, 2019
    Congress is set to hold a hearing amid concerns about “deepfakes,” or fake videos manipulated to look incredibly real, and how they can spread false information or influence elections. NBC’s Morgan Radford takes a closer look at the technology for TODAY.
    Full story
  • Woman Face Image

    It's All Fun And Games Until Someone Gets Hurt: The Implications Of DeepfakesOpens in a new window

    Dec 27, 2019
    The earliest roots of deepfakes were a source of social media fun. Anyone capable of taking a selfie could superimpose their face onto a super model’s body and share it for all of their followers to see. Users could also apply any one of the ubiquitous face filters that allow you to add some floppy dog ears or bunny whiskers to your Instagram photos. These types of distorted images were the first incarnations of the deepfake era, and until recently, it was harmless. Today, however, deepfakes are shaking the very foundation of our trust in what we see, hear and believe, to the point that we’re not sure what is real and what is fake.
    Opens in a new window Full story
  • Image of Jeff Smith

    Jeff Smith on "Deepfake" VideosOpens in a new window

    Jun 7, 2019
    Washington Journal - University of Colorado-Denver’s Jeff Smith discusses the creation and distribution of “deepfake” videos, especially as Congress plans to investigate their use.
    Opens in a new window Full story
  • Shadowy Silhouette

    The English Voice of ISIS Comes Out of the ShadowsOpens in a new window

    Feb 17, 2019
    More than four years ago, the Federal Bureau of Investigation appealed to the public to help identify the narrator in one of the Islamic State’s best-known videos, showing captured Syrian soldiers digging their own graves and then being shot in the head. Speaking fluent English with a North American accent, the man would go on to narrate countless other videos and radio broadcasts by the Islamic State, serving as the terrorist group’s faceless evangelist to Americans and other English speakers seeking to learn about its toxic ideology. Now a 35-year-old Canadian citizen, who studied at a college in Toronto and once worked in information technology at a company contracted by IBM, says he is the anonymous narrator.
    Opens in a new window Full story
  • When seeing is no longer believing

    When seeing is no longer believingOpens in a new window

    Jan 1, 2019
    CNN - Advances in artificial intelligence could soon make creating convincing fake audio and video – known as “deepfakes” – relatively easy. Making a person appear to say or do something they did not has the potential to take the war of disinformation to a whole new level. Click here for more on deepfakes and what the US government is doing to combat them.
    Opens in a new window Full story
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