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Pushing back on misinformation with provenance - Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

BitDepth#1427

Mark Lyndersay

SANTIAGO LYON, a former vice-president at the Associated Press, noted that Adobe's Content Authenticity Initiative (CAI) began in 2019 as an open-source initiative to address distrust of news and particularly images and video.

It isn't Adobe's first effort at open-sourcing its technologies. The portable document format (PDF) and the digital negative format (DNG) both sought to bring open access to document and raw digital-image formats respectively.

While PDFs are widely used and there is some adoption of DNG, most recently as a preferred format for smartphone raw files, the planned CinemaDNG format crashed ignominiously and Adobe doesn't talk about it any more.

"We identified four main areas, starting with detection, which involves uploading suspect files to programs that look for telltale signs of manipulation," said Lyon, who is now head of Advocacy and Education for CAI, at a September 19 webinar.

"We deliberately decided not to get involved in the detection game, in part because it's not scalable. It's also not particularly accurate and ends up as an arms race, with bad actors staying one step ahead of the latest detection software. 'We chose to focus on three other areas: policy, which involves briefing policymakers and lawmakers around the world to make sure that they're up to speed with the latest technologies.

"(We also offer) advice and education that's focused on media literacy and consumer literacy, but what we're really focused on is the notion of provenance. (CAI wants to make the) origins of digital content, whether images, video, audio recordings or other file formats, transparent, showing the viewer where and how the files were created, what changes might have been made to them along their journey from creation through editing to publication."

In the face of generative AI image manipulations and AI-powered image alteration tools that make falsification easy for novice users, journalism faces real challenges in ensuring that readers and viewers can trust what they see as a representation of the truth.

Despite concerns about image-manipulation and video deep fakes, which use video manipulation to falsify motion clips, Ariel Bogle, investigations reporter at the Guardian Australia, warns of the greater pervasiveness of cheap fakes.

"This is content that is real video that's been filmed at some point in time that now has been removed from its context. Maybe it's been slightly edited, slowed down, pauses on someone's face when they have a strange expression to suggest that they are evil or lying to the public.

"Cheap fakes end up recontextualising imagery, using basic effects which most people can access and use, speeding up, slowing down, adding colour filters to give a dingy or sinister aspect to videos."

Photojournalist Ron Haviv of the VII foundation explores how this happens in a documentary of his 30-year-old photo of violence in Bosnia (biographyofaphoto.com) which has been decontextualised, misrepresented and used as propaganda. Ha

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