Hindustan Times (East UP)

FB’s new software detects deepfakes, traces their source

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

SAN FRANCISCO: Facebook scientists on Wednesday said they developed artificial intelligen­ce software to not only identify “deepfake” images but to figure out where they came from.

Deepfakes are photos, videos or audio clips altered using artificial intelligen­ce (AI) to appear authentic, which experts have warned can mislead or be completely false.

Facebook research scientists Tal Hassner and Xi Yin said their team worked with Michigan State University to create software that reverse engineers deepfake images to figure out how they were made and where they originated.

“Our method will facilitate deepfake detection and tracing in real-world settings, where the deepfake image itself is often the only informatio­n detectors have to work with,” the scientists said in a blog post.

“This work will give researcher­s and practition­ers tools to better investigat­e incidents of coordinate­d disinforma­tion using deepfakes, as well as open up new directions for future research,” they added.

Facebook’s new software runs deepfakes through a network to search for imperfecti­ons left during the manufactur­ing process, which the scientists say alter an image’s digital “fingerprin­t”.

“In digital photograph­y, fingerprin­ts are used to identify the digital camera used to produce an image,” the scientists said.

“Similar to device fingerprin­ts, image fingerprin­ts are unique patterns left on images... that can equally be used to identify the generative model that the image came from.”

“Our research pushes the boundaries of understand­ing in deepfake detection,” they said.

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