Sept. 23, 2022, 1:12 a.m. | Eric Horvitz

cs.LG updates on arXiv.org arxiv.org

Over a five-year period, computing methods for generating high-fidelity,
fictional depictions of people and events moved from exotic demonstrations by
computer science research teams into ongoing use as a tool of disinformation.
The methods, referred to with the portmanteau of "deepfakes," have been used to
create compelling audiovisual content. Here, I share challenges ahead with
malevolent uses of two classes of deepfakes that we can expect to come into
practice with costly implications for society: interactive and compositional
deepfakes. Interactive …

arxiv deepfakes interactive

Lead Developer (AI)

@ Cere Network | San Francisco, US

Research Engineer

@ Allora Labs | Remote

Ecosystem Manager

@ Allora Labs | Remote

Founding AI Engineer, Agents

@ Occam AI | New York

AI Engineer Intern, Agents

@ Occam AI | US

AI Research Scientist

@ Vara | Berlin, Germany and Remote