San Francisco Chronicle

Zuckerberg is focus of latest doctored video

- By Mae Anderson Mae Anderson is an Associated Press writer.

Three weeks after Facebook refused to remove a doctored video of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi slurring her words, Mark Zuckerberg is getting a taste of his own medicine: fake footage showing him gloating over his one-man domination of the world.

It’s the latest flap over deviously altered “deepfake” videos as Facebook and other social media services struggle to stop the spread of misinforma­tion and fake news while also respecting free speech and fending off allegation­s of censorship.

The somewhat crude video of the Facebook CEO, created as part of an art project and circulated on Instagram, which is owned by Facebook, for the past few days, combines news footage of Zuckerberg with phony audio.

“Imagine this for a second, one man with total control over billions of people’s stolen data, all their secrets, their lives, their futures,” Zuckerberg seemingly intones in a voice that does not sound very much like Zuckerberg’s.

“I owe it all to Spectre. Spectre showed me that whoever controls the data controls the future.” (Spectre is the evil organizati­on in the James Bond movies.)

The video was created by artists Bill Posters and Daniel Howe, with help from artificial intelligen­ce companies, and displayed during the past week or so at an art show in Britain that is designed to demonstrat­e the influence of technology.

Some people also put the footage on Instagram and Vimeo.

Posters said he targeted Zuckerberg as “one person governing control of 2 billion people’s personal private data. He’s at the center of the debate that asks questions whether that is a safe place for our data to be.”

When the Pelosi video turned up on Facebook, the Menlo Park company said that it did not violate any of its policies.

Pelosi criticized Facebook for leaving the video up. Zuckerberg tried to reach out to her to explain the situation, but she did not take his call, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorized to discuss it and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Facebook and Pelosi’s office declined to comment Wednesday.

Facebook said the Zuckerberg video likewise doesn’t violate its Instagram policies and will be left up.

“We will treat this content the same way we treat all misinforma­tion on Instagram,” the company said.

Facebook does not prohibit false informatio­n from being shared on Instagram or its main Facebook service.

If third-party fact-checkers flag an item on the main service as false, the company “downranks” it to make it more difficult to find. Facebook has been testing a way to extend that approach to Instagram.

The Associated Press is working with Facebook as part of an effort to fact-check misinforma­tion that is shared widely online.

The Zuckerberg video uses a form of artificial intelligen­ce in which a computer is fed image and audio files of a person to learn how to mimic his or her facial expression­s. An actor supplies the voice, and the computer then syncs up the image with the sound.

Last year, in another case of altered footage, the White House tweeted what an expert determined was a speeded-up video of CNN reporter Jim Acosta that made him look more aggressive than he actually was when an intern tried to take his microphone away as he was asking President Trump a question.

Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives said that even though the Zuckerberg video is an art piece and not actual piece of disinforma­tion meant to deceive, it highlights the challenges of policing content on Facebook and Instagram.

“It just shows that it is still an uphill battle for the company as they try to rectify these issues,” he said.

 ??  ?? Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is getting a taste of his own medicine.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is getting a taste of his own medicine.

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