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  • We're entering an era in which our enemies can make anyone say anything at any point in time.”

  • Jordan Peele created this fake video of President Obama to demonstrate how easy it was to put

  • words in someone else's mouth-

  • moving forward we need to be more vigilant with what we trust from the internet.

  • not everyone bought it, but the technology behind it is rapidly improving, even as worries

  • increase about its potential for harm.

  • This is your Bloomberg QuickTake on Fake Videos.

  • Deep fakes, or realistic-looking fake videos and audio, gained popularity as a means of

  • adding famous actresses into porn scenes.

  • Despite bans on major websites, they remain easy to make and find.

  • They're named for the deep-learning AI algorithms that make them possible.

  • Input real audio or video of a specific person- the more, the better- and the software tries

  • to recognize patterns in speech and movement.

  • Introduce a new element like someone else's face or voice, and a deep fake is born.

  • Jeremy Kahn: It's actually extremely easy to make one of these thingsthere was just

  • some breakthroughs from academic researchers who work with this particular kind of machine

  • learning in the past few weeks, which would drastically reduce the amount of video you

  • need actually to create one of these.

  • Programs like FakeApp, the most popular one for making deep fakes, need dozens of hours

  • of human assistance to create a video that looks like this rather than this, but that's

  • changing.

  • In September researchers at Carnegie-Mellon revealed unsupervised software that accurately

  • reproduced not just facial features, but changing weather patterns and flowers in bloom as well.

  • But with increasing capability comes increasing concern.

  • You know, this is kind of fake news on steroids potentially.

  • We do not know of a case yet where someone has tried to use this to perpetrate a kind

  • of fraud or an information warfare campaign, or for that matter, to really damage someone's

  • reputation, but it's the danger that everyone is really afraid of.

  • In a world where fakes are easy to create- authenticity also becomes easier to deny.

  • People caught doing genuinely objectionable things could claim evidence against them is

  • bogus.

  • Fake videos are also difficult to detect, though researchers and the US Department of

  • Defense, in particular, have said they're working on ways to counter them.

  • Deep Fakes do however have some positive potential- take CereProc, who creates digital voices

  • for people who lose theirs from disease

  • There are also applications that could be considered more value-neutral, like the many,

  • many deep fakes that exist solely to turn as many movies as possible into Nicolas Cage

  • movies.

We're entering an era in which our enemies can make anyone say anything at any point in time.”

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