Abstract
The danger posed by falsified media, commonly referred to as deepfakes, has been well researched and documented. The software Faceswap to was used to swap the faces of two politician (Joe Biden and Donald Trump). The testing was performed using an affordable consumer GPU (an AMD Radeon RX 570) over 100,000 iterations. The process and results for the two attempts with the best results (and largest differences) were recorded. The result was ultimately unconvincing, while the software was able to recreate the facial structure the lighting and skin tone did not blend at all.
Document Type
Paper
Disciplines
Artificial Intelligence and Robotics | Communication Technology and New Media | Graphics and Human Computer Interfaces | Theory and Algorithms
DOI
10.25776/0s3f-h404
Publication Date
2020
Upload File
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Included in
Artificial Intelligence and Robotics Commons, Communication Technology and New Media Commons, Graphics and Human Computer Interfaces Commons, Theory and Algorithms Commons
Accessibility of Deepfakes
The danger posed by falsified media, commonly referred to as deepfakes, has been well researched and documented. The software Faceswap to was used to swap the faces of two politician (Joe Biden and Donald Trump). The testing was performed using an affordable consumer GPU (an AMD Radeon RX 570) over 100,000 iterations. The process and results for the two attempts with the best results (and largest differences) were recorded. The result was ultimately unconvincing, while the software was able to recreate the facial structure the lighting and skin tone did not blend at all.