English

On the Horizon: Interactive and Compositional Deepfakes

Artificial Intelligence 2022-09-23 v3 Machine Learning

Abstract

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 deepfakes have the capability to impersonate people with realistic interactive behaviors, taking advantage of advances in multimodal interaction. Compositional deepfakes leverage synthetic content in larger disinformation plans that integrate sets of deepfakes over time with observed, expected, and engineered world events to create persuasive synthetic histories. Synthetic histories can be constructed manually but may one day be guided by adversarial generative explanation (AGE) techniques. In the absence of mitigations, interactive and compositional deepfakes threaten to move us closer to a post-epistemic world, where fact cannot be distinguished from fiction. I shall describe interactive and compositional deepfakes and reflect about cautions and potential mitigations to defend against them.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2209.01714,
  title  = {On the Horizon: Interactive and Compositional Deepfakes},
  author = {Eric Horvitz},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2209.01714},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

CCC Blue Sky Ideas paper, published at the ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI '22), November 7-11, 2022

R2 v1 2026-06-28T00:42:48.083Z