Weekend Herald

‘No easy fix’ for deepfake videos

- Susannah George in Washington

“Deepfake” videos pose a clear and growing threat to the United States’ national security, lawmakers and experts say. The question is what to do about it, and that’s not easily answered.

A House Intelligen­ce Committee hearing yesterday served up a public warning about the deceptive powers of artificial intelligen­ce software and offered a sobering assessment of how fast the technology is outpacing efforts to stop it.

With a crudely altered video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi fresh on everyone’s minds, lawmakers heard from experts how difficult it will be to combat these fakes and prevent them from being used to interfere in the 2020 election.

“We don’t have a general solution,” said David Doermann, a former official with Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency. “This is a cat and a mouse game.” As the ability to detect such videos improves, so does the technology used to make them.

The videos are made using facial mapping and artificial intelligen­ce. The altered video of Pelosi, which was viewed more than 3 million times on social media, gave only a glimpse of what the technology can do. Experts dismissed the clip, which was slowed down to make it appear that Pelosi was slurring her words, as nothing more than a “cheap fake”. Representa­tive Adam Schiff, the committee chairman, said the Pelosi video “demonstrat­es the scale of the challenge we face”. But he said he fears a more “nightmaris­h scenario”, with the public struggling to separate fact from fiction.

Doermann said the threat has grown worse due to the proliferat­ion of what was once specialise­d technology. Creating convincing fabricated videos once required expensive equipment and software, but now “a high school student with a good computer” can do it, he said.

Schiff told reporters after the hearing that he believes federal regulation aimed at curbing deepfakes is “worthy of serious considerat­ion”. But he said the problem will never be completely solved, only suppressed.

Clint Watts, a research fellow with the Foreign Policy Research Institute, suggested tech companies should play a role in deciding which false videos should be taken down from the internet. But that idea drew scepticism from the committee’s top Republican, California’s Devin Nunes. He raised concerns about granting too much authority to tech giants such as Facebook and Twitter to make judgment calls about content.

Nunes claimed that current filters have a pro-liberal bias. “Most of the time it’s conservati­ves who get banned,” he said. “It’s all in who’s building the filter, right?”

Danielle Citron, a University of Maryland Law professor, told lawmakers that many of the laws regulating online video date back decades and need to be overhauled to keep pace with the growing threat.

“We have an audience primed to believe things like manipulate­d video of lawmakers,” Citron said.

US intelligen­ce officials have repeatedly warned about the threat of foreign meddling in politics, especially in the leadup to elections.

US officials determined Russia carried out a sweeping political disinforma­tion campaign on US social media to influence the 2016 election. The director of national intelligen­ce, Dan Coats, has said Russia attempted to meddle in the 2018 midterm elections, but was unsuccessf­ul.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? An altered video of Nancy Pelosi was viewed more than 3 million times on social media.
Photo / AP An altered video of Nancy Pelosi was viewed more than 3 million times on social media.

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