Deep Fake

For the past five years, many big movie companies such as Disney and Hollywood have been live action films with little to no actual location scenery. Instead, they are doing virtually everything digitally; and that has come to include people.

Disney was criticized heavily with Star Wars: Rogue One because Karey Fisher was playing the role of Princess Leah Skywalker-Solo. Why you might ask? Because Karey Fisher had died months earlier from a drug overdose, and she was just one of few actors that were in Rogue One that were absent from filming for some reason. This meant that every move and sound that came from the absent-yet-on-screen actors was faked, but this is the same technology that Deep Fake employs. Deep Fake changes parts of a person to do and say what the manipulator wishes, however there are a few tricks to finding these. Watch the minute facial details, these are the areas that Deep Fake struggles the most with.

Is it available to everyone? Yes, anyone can create a deep fake using a decent laptop and coding as it does not take much to do it; but for pristine results, you need to have lots of man power and high quality input images. This makes high visibility people like celebrities and world leaders vulnerable to manipulation, and has even been used in nonconsensual pornography, prompting some to advocate for it to be put on the list of revenge porn. But this does solve the problems of actors not being able to be in multiple films simultaneously. Meaning that with the widespread adoption of the technology, actors can stay forever young and be in endless films at the click of a button.

To end this post, let us tell Chris Umé thanks for bringing us deep fake, and making them popular with those viral deepfake Tom Cruise videos on TikTok. The visual and AI effects artist in Bangkok, India created deepfake videos as part of his company Metaphysic’s products.

 

Introduction

Hello everyone,

My name is Joni and I wanted to introduce myself. I am the oldest child in a family with three children and we were homeschooled by my amazing dad. Since I was homeschooled my entire school life, I have grown to love reading and art. Art is something I have always done, whether it was drawing on paper scrapes to alleviate my boredom or coloring pages off the internet, I had a few different art experiences.

Digital art is becoming a new found stream of income, but I have done it for years a way to store art in a compact form. Windows Paint was a good program for beginners because it allowed for easy access to different art tools without any internet access. Which was good, because it meant that it more secure and it was one less thing my parents had to think about when it came to the internet. Now Windows has moved on to Paint 3D, a program that not only allows you to created 2 dimensional artwork, but also allows you to created 3 dimensional artwork that can be used as project models. However, some of the 3D artwork requires the internet, and maybe signaling that the age of internet-less art creation maybe coming to a close as more programs now require an internet connection to work properly in some form.

That however is a topic for a different time. As I was saying earlier in my post, I also love reading. When I was little, my dad used to read us stories and as we got older, he helped us learn to read. When ever one of us got stuck on a hard word, he made us sound it out or use the dictionary, because he said that if he just told us, we would never truly learn it and would always be returning to him for help. That, at the time, was a little irritating, because it seemed to take more time to go find what we were struggling with, but it has since paid off.

So, what about you? What is something you did growing up with your parents that you are thankful for now?