CVCRJul 4, 2024

Solutions to Deepfakes: Can Camera Hardware, Cryptography, and Deep Learning Verify Real Images?

Georgia Tech
arXiv:2407.04169v13 citationsh-index: 29
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This tackles the credibility crisis in digital media for society, but it is incremental as it reviews existing methods rather than introducing new ones.

The paper addresses the challenge of distinguishing real images from synthetic ones generated by AI, proposing to evaluate detection and cryptographic strategies to verify authenticity with high confidence.

The exponential progress in generative AI poses serious implications for the credibility of all real images and videos. There will exist a point in the future where 1) digital content produced by generative AI will be indistinguishable from those created by cameras, 2) high-quality generative algorithms will be accessible to anyone, and 3) the ratio of all synthetic to real images will be large. It is imperative to establish methods that can separate real data from synthetic data with high confidence. We define real images as those that were produced by the camera hardware, capturing a real-world scene. Any synthetic generation of an image or alteration of a real image through generative AI or computer graphics techniques is labeled as a synthetic image. To this end, this document aims to: present known strategies in detection and cryptography that can be employed to verify which images are real, weight the strengths and weaknesses of these strategies, and suggest additional improvements to alleviate shortcomings.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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