this post was submitted on 27 Oct 2024
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If AI and deep fakes can listen to a video or audio of a person and then are able to successfully reproduce such person, what does this entail for trials?

It used to be that recording audio or video would give strong information which often would weigh more than witnesses, but soon enough perfect forgery could enter the courtroom just as it's doing in social media (where you're not sworn to tell the truth, though the consequences are real)

I know fake information is a problem everywhere, but I started wondering what will happen when it creeps in testimonies.

How will we defend ourselves, while still using real videos or audios as proof? Or are we just doomed?

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[–] [email protected] 103 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Fake evidence, e.g. forged documents, are not not new things. They take things like origin, chain of custody etc into account.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Sure, but if you meet up with someone and they later have an audio recording that is completely fabricated from the real audio, there's nothing for chain of anything. Audio used to be damning evidence and was fairly easily discoverable if it was hacked together to try to sound different. If that goes away, then it just becomes useless as evidence.

[–] hypna 7 points 1 month ago

It becomes useless as evidence unless you can establish authenticity. It just makes audio recordings more in a class with text documents; perfectly fakeable, but admissible with the right supporting information. So I agree it's a change, but it's not the end of audio evidence, and it's a change in a direction which courts already have experience.

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