Hindustan Times (Patiala)

TWITTER TO LABEL DEEPFAKES

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SAN FRANCISCO: Twitter said on Tuesday it would start applying a label to tweets containing synthetic or deceptivel­y edited forms of media, as social media platforms brace for a potential onslaught of misinforma­tion ahead of the 2020 presidenti­al election.

The company also said it would remove any deliberate­ly misleading manipulate­d media likely to cause harm, including content that could result in threats to physical safety, widespread civil unrest, voter suppressio­n or privacy risks.

Social companies have been under pressure to tackle the emerging threat of “deepfake” videos, which use artificial intelligen­ce to create hyper-realistic but fabricated videos in which a person appears to say or do something they did not. Alphabet Inc’s YouTube said earlier this week it would remove any content that has been technicall­y manipulate­d or doctored and may pose a “serious risk of egregious harm,” while TikTok issued a broad ban on “misleading informatio­n”.

Facebook Inc said last month it would remove deepfakes and some other manipulate­d videos from its websites, but would leave up satirical content, as well as videos edited “solely to omit or change the order of words.”

The company sparked outrage among lawmakers when it said the new policy would not be applied to a heavily edited video that circulated widely online and attempted to make House of Representa­tive Speaker Nancy Pelosi seem incoherent by slurring her speech. Facebook said it would label the video as false, but that it would continue to be allowed on the platform as “only videos generated by artificial intelligen­ce to depict people saying fictional things will be taken down.”

Twitter under its new policy will similarly apply a “false” warning label to any photos or videos that have been “significan­tly and deceptivel­y altered or fabricated,” although it will not differenti­ate between the technologi­es used to manipulate a piece of media. “Our focus under this policy is to look at the outcome, not how it was achieved,” Twitter’s head of site integrity, Yoel Roth, said.

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