Message from @Ghostler
Discord ID: 410170185761161228
but back on the subject, this tech will make video footage unreliable as evidence, and until the world realises this tech is already here, fake news is gonna boom soon
@Rain deepfake is not the end all solution for faking something, i've been over this
it's more of a step back if you are looking for perfect replication
it is currently not even close to being on the level that you get it accepted as evidence in court
too high quality and it's blatantly fake
too low quality and it's not good enough to prove a murder
you can prove if a photo was photoshopped 99% of the time... and you only have to prove that for a single frame of a faked video...
you two are right,
But these days next to a court of law
you can also get a bad conviction in the court of public opinion, which in certain careers is a death sentence, just look at metoo, or other such tainted witch-hunt events, that coolest monkey in the jungle incident at H&M
court of public pinion... watch orville episode 7... we are getting there...
"bad conviction in the court of public opinion" 🤔
oh no
the people that autistically screech with completely unfounded opinions
i wish i could agree they're just harmless screechers,
but people have gotten their reputation damaged, got fired and such over just allegations, imagine if theres even a "video proof" claim
i mean this shit has been going on since humans existed
the difference is that in the past you could ask if they have evidence, and they have none, and some will actually then realise it might not be real
with this it'll simply guarantee gullible people will buy whatever you serve them,
and with CNN peddling stories like Two scoops of ice cream, fake forged videos won't be off their realm of narrative telling
They already can fake video.
Well to an extent.
Can combine it with this to make it seem even more realistic https://youtu.be/I3l4XLZ59iw
Tim Pool died in malmo and someone behind the scenes is representing him now
must be his evil twin brother, Tom Pond
The technology exists currently for very fluid wax masks
The only way to really know for sure is to make the ambient temperature above 88 deg F
You see; back in the early 80's there was a hacker conglomerate out of El Paso
They had been researching Facial recognition as part of a larger DARPA project
They were attempting to figure out what the larger purpose of the project was; and eventually they'd stumble upon it in 1991. Mass surveillance; gathering everything possible from 24/7 cameras around the world.
DARPA, in league with the NSA had been essentially backdooring every DVR and every associated piece of hardware to stream what data it could directly to sites all across the US.
It was a large distributed system, much like the one that currently exists today.
So in 1992; knowing that their faces were already registered, mapped; and they were being tracked everywhere as they were research assets, they decided to take matters into their own hands.
First, they put eye protection on
Then they put 70/30 mixtures of sufuric acid splashed onto their face
melting it, as it were; to prevent any unique facial signs from appearing
Once they healed from the burns, about 4-5 months down the road, they began to don 'masks' of this wax
it was temporary at first, but the scarring and nullification of their facial features added a good place for the wax to keep a hold on what remained of their skin
They took up new faces
Facial recognition was useless when they could change their facial features pretty much at will.
To test this; in 1993 there was a large robbery at the first national bank building, in El Paso
6 members of the group went in, threatened to blow the place up if they were not presented with a million dollars.... All with the face of David Duchovny.
The bank quickly caved.
When the feds began to look into it; the only real piece of evidence was a DNA sample and some of the leftover wax
It wouldn't be until 2010 that the sample would be linked to a large string of corporate fraud at tech companies around the US; and one from a DARPA research lab.