12.4 C
Munich
星期四, 2 7 月, 2026

Microsoft has a new plan to prove what’s real and what’s AI online

Must read

Android 17 makes it harder for a brute-force attack to successfully break into your phone

With this change for certain Android phones, even brute-force Cellebrite machines will be severely limited. #Android #harder #bruteforce #attack #successfully #break #phone

Pet owners can get free flea treatment that ‘takes the stress out’

Hot weather creates the perfect conditions for fleas to multiply and quickly invade our homes - protect pets with an Itch subscriptionThis article contains...

Samsung's 256GB Galaxy Tab S10 Lite with S Pen is somehow cheaper now than during Prime Day

One of the best mid-range Android tablets around is impressively available at its lowest ever price in a 256GB storage variant with no restrictions...

Baywatch’s Brooks Nader risks spilling over risky plunging top as curves almost slip out

Baywatch babe Brooks Nader has teased fans with her latest look wearing just a halter neck top with gaping sides and a plunging neckline...

Hany Farid, a professor at UC Berkeley who specializes in digital forensics but wasn’t involved in the Microsoft research, says that if the industry adopted the company’s blueprint, it would be meaningfully more difficult to deceive the public with manipulated content. Sophisticated individuals or governments can work to bypass such tools, he says, but the new standard could eliminate a significant portion of misleading material.

“I don’t think it solves the problem, but I think it takes a nice big chunk out of it,” he says.

Still, there are reasons to see Microsoft’s approach as an example of somewhat naïve techno-optimism. There is growing evidence that people are swayed by AI-generated content even when they know that it is false. And in a recent study of pro-Russian AI-generated videos about the war in Ukraine, comments pointing out that the videos were made with AI received far less engagement than comments treating them as genuine. 

“Are there people who, no matter what you tell them, are going to believe what they believe?” Farid asks. “Yes.” But, he adds, “there are a vast majority of Americans and citizens around the world who I do think want to know the truth.”

That desire has not exactly led to urgent action from tech companies. Google started adding a watermark to content generated by its AI tools in 2023, which Farid says has been helpful in his investigations. Some platforms use C2PA, a provenance standard Microsoft helped launch in 2021. But the full suite of changes that Microsoft suggests, powerful as they are, might remain only suggestions if they threaten the business models of AI companies or social media platforms.

#Microsoft #plan #prove #whats #real #whats #online

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

Android 17 makes it harder for a brute-force attack to successfully break into your phone

With this change for certain Android phones, even brute-force Cellebrite machines will be severely limited. #Android #harder #bruteforce #attack #successfully #break #phone

Pet owners can get free flea treatment that ‘takes the stress out’

Hot weather creates the perfect conditions for fleas to multiply and quickly invade our homes - protect pets with an Itch subscriptionThis article contains...

Samsung's 256GB Galaxy Tab S10 Lite with S Pen is somehow cheaper now than during Prime Day

One of the best mid-range Android tablets around is impressively available at its lowest ever price in a 256GB storage variant with no restrictions...

Baywatch’s Brooks Nader risks spilling over risky plunging top as curves almost slip out

Baywatch babe Brooks Nader has teased fans with her latest look wearing just a halter neck top with gaping sides and a plunging neckline...

It's not just the iPhone 18 Pro price boom – older Apple devices get costlier, too

Is there a silver lining to the whole mess? Sort of. #It039s #iPhone #Pro #price #boom #older #Apple #devices #costlier