When used recklessly, deepfake, sometimes known as the “danger of the digital age,” can pose enormous dangers to individuals and organizations by allowing misinformation to spread quickly. So, what exactly is Deepfake?
The recently famous “Deepfake” technology allows the creation of highly realistic, fake movies of individuals talking, laughing, or utilizing facial emotions from a photograph or painting of a face, as well as the capacity to alter and edit the speech in any video.
The technology in question, derived from videos employing various artificial intelligence systems, enables the speaker in any video to quickly change what he or she says. The tool, which can add and remove new words from the voice, is said to make modifying the speech in any video as simple as copying and pasting a text or a word.
When employed in the film and television industries, this technology, which allows for the repair of erroneous dialog without the need for re-shooting, presents considerable hazards and dangers when evil people are involved.
Deepfake Brings Celebrities Back to Life
It was revealed that Samsung’s Artificial Intelligence Center in Moscow had created a technique that could generate incredibly realistic false films from a single facial photo or painting.
Mona Lisa’s facial expressions were moved using “Deepfake” technology, while the researchers turned images of famous people including Marilyn Monroe, Fyodor Dostoevsky, and Albert Einstein, as well as the Mona Lisa painting, into movies and posted them on YouTube.